Landscapes of Law -

Landscapes of Law

Practicing Sovereignty in Transnational Terrain
Buch | Softcover
352 Seiten
2024
University of Pennsylvania Press (Verlag)
978-1-5128-2683-8 (ISBN)
37,40 inkl. MwSt
International scholars offer ethnographic analyses of the relations between transnationalism, law, and culture

The recent surge of right-wing populism in Europe and the United States is widely perceived as evidence of ongoing challenges to the policies and institutions of globalization. But as editors Carol J. Greenhouse and Christina L. Davis observe in their introduction to Landscapes of Law, the appeal to national culture is not restricted to the ethno-nationalisms of the developing world outside of industrial democracies nor to insurgent groups within them. The essays they have collected in this volume reveal how claims of national culture emerge in the pursuit of transnationalism and, under some circumstances, become embedded within international law. The premise that there is inherent tension between nationalism and globalism is misleading. Whether asserted explicitly as state sovereignty or implicitly as cultural community, claims of national culture mediate how governments assert their interests and values when engaging with transnational law. Landscapes of Law demonstrates how nationalism operates in the contested zone between borderless capital and bordered states.

Drawing from the fields of anthropology, international relations, law, political science, and sociology, the book's international contributors examine the ways in which claims of national differences are produced within transnational institutions. Insights from case studies across a wide range of topics reveal how such claims may be worked into policy prescriptions and legal arrangements or provide ad hoc bargaining chips. Together, they show that expressions of national culture outside of state boundaries consolidate claims of sovereignty. The contributors offer innovative frameworks for analyzing the relationships among transnationalism, law, and cultural claims at various levels and scales. They demonstrate how overlapping communities use law to define borders and shape relationships among actors rather than to generate a single social ordering.

Landscapes of Law traces the theoretical implications generated by an understanding of transnational law that challenges the conventional separation of individual, community, society, national, and international spaces.

Contributors: Katayoun Alidadi, Tugba Basaran, Rachel Brewster, Sandra Brunnegger, Christina L. Davis, Sara Dezalay, Marie-Claire Foblets, Henry Gao, Carol J. Greenhouse, David Leheny, Mark Fathi Massoud, Teresa Rodríguez-de-las-Heras Ballell, Gregory Shaffer, Mariana Valverde.

Carol J. Greenhouse is the Arthur W. Marks '19 Professor of Anthropology Emeritus at Princeton University. She is author and editor of numerous books, including Ethnographies of Neoliberalism and The Paradox of Relevance: Ethnography and Citizenship in the United States, both available from the University of Pennsylvania Press. Christina L. Davis is Professor in the Department of Government at Harvard University and the Susan S. and Kenneth L. Wallach Professor at the Radcliffe Institute. She is author of Why Adjudicate? Enforcing Trade Rules in the WTO and Food Fights Over Free Trade: How International Institutions Promote Agricultural Trade Liberalization.

Introduction. Mapping Culture onto Transnational Law

Carol J. Greenhouse and Christina L. Davis

Chapter 1. A Journey Through Law's Landscapes: Close Encounters of the Scalar Kind

Tugba Basaran

Chapter 2. Intersecting Legal Spaces: International Trade and Anticorruption Law

Rachel Brewster

Chapter 3. Changing Internally to Engage Externally: China and the WTO Legal System

Gregory Shaffer and Henry Gao

Chapter 4. The "Africa Bar" of Paris: A Microcosm of Interconnected Histories of Legal Globalization

Sara Dezalay

Chapter 5. Cultural Difference as Legal Resolution: The Raising of the Ehime Maru

David Leheny

Chapter 6. Landscapes of Law in War-Torn Societies

Mark Fathi Massoud

Chapter 7. Uncertain Sovereignties: Indigenous-State Relations in Colombia

Sandra Brunnegger

Chapter 8. Between Sovereignty and Transnationalism: The European Union as an Incomplete "Transnational Legal Space"

Marie-Claire Foblets and Katayoun Alidadi

Chapter 9. The Emergence of Digital Communities: Generating Trust, Managing Conflicts, and Regulating Globality . . . Digitality

Teresa Rodríguez-de-las-Heras Ballell

Chapter 10. Landscapes of Actually Existing Liberalism: Some Thoughts on the Historical Dialectic of Liberty and Philanthropy

Mariana Valverde

List of Contributors

Index

Acknowledgments

Erscheint lt. Verlag 6.8.2024
Zusatzinfo 1 illus.
Verlagsort Pennsylvania
Sprache englisch
Maße 152 x 229 mm
Themenwelt Recht / Steuern EU / Internationales Recht
Sozialwissenschaften Ethnologie
Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie
ISBN-10 1-5128-2683-9 / 1512826839
ISBN-13 978-1-5128-2683-8 / 9781512826838
Zustand Neuware
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