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Judicial Decision-Making, Ideology and the Political: Towards an Agonistic Theory of Adjudication Law and Critique Pub Date : 2021-03-30 Rafał Mańko
The present paper puts forward a first outline of a possible agonistic theory of adjudication, conceived of as an extension of Chantal Mouffe’s agonistic theory of democracy onto the domain of the juridical, and specifically, judicial decision-making. Mouffe’s concept of the political as the dimension of inherent and unalienable conflicts (antagonisms) which, nonetheless, need to be tamed for a pluralist
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Repainting the Rabbithole: Law, Science, Truth and Responsibility Law and Critique Pub Date : 2021-03-30 Jason A. Beckett
An exploration of the connections between law, science, and truth, this paper argues that ‘truth’ is an evolving, rather than fixed, concept. It is a human creation, and the processes, or standards, by which it has been evaluated have changed over time. Currently knowledge production is anchored in the natural sciences but reproduced and validated by philosophical rationalisation. There are two problems
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Criminal Law Guilt and Ontological Guilt: A Heideggerian Perspective Law and Critique Pub Date : 2021-03-26 Charis N. Papacharalambous
The paper deals with the notion of guilt according to Heidegger’s philosophy and its repercussions for the understanding of guilt according to criminal law doctrine and theory. Heidegger’s notion on guilt is tantamount to Dasein’s incapacity to exhaust all its existential possibilities, whereas legal guilt has to do only with man’s legal indebtedness, which is an aspect of inauthenticity, a deficient
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The Principle of the ‘Common’, Legal Pluralism and Decolonization in Latin America Law and Critique Pub Date : 2021-03-15 Antonio Carlos Wolkmer, Maria de Fátima Schumacher Wolkmer
This paper aims to introduce, in the context of Latin America, the theoretical epistemic discussion regarding the theme of the ‘common’ as a political principle which substantiates instituting and autonomous processes of government, control and community regulation. The work seeks to relate a democratic scenario of the ‘common’ with the discourses of pluralist and decolonial normativity, in a way that
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Confession as a Form of Knowledge-Power in the Problem of Sexuality Law and Critique Pub Date : 2021-03-08 Iiris Kestilä
This article addresses two questions related to the discrimination of homosexuals in the British Armed Forces as illuminated in the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights in the cases Smith and Grady v. the United Kingdom and Beck, Copp and Bazeley v. the United Kingdom. First, how does the military organization obtain knowledge about its subjects? Two works by Michel Foucault concerning the
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A Critique of the Model of Gender Recognition and the Limits of Self-Declaration for Non-Binary Trans Individuals Law and Critique Pub Date : 2021-02-20 Caterina Nirta
This article considers the model of recognition in the Gender Recognition Act 2004 (GRA) and, through a critique of the value of stability pursued through this legislation, argues that recognition as a model is incompatible with the variety of experiences of non-binary trans-identified individuals. The article then moves on to analyse self-declaration, part of the proposed reform recently dismissed
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Bionic Bodies, Posthuman Violence and the Disembodied Criminal Subject Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-11-20 Sabrina Gilani
This article examines how the so-called disembodied criminal subject is given structure and form through the law of homicide and assault. By analysing how the body is materialised through the criminal law’s enactment of death and injury, this article suggests that the biological positioning of these harms of violence as uncontroversial, natural, and universal conditions of being ‘human’ cannot fully
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Rethinking the Encounter Between Law and Nature in the Anthropocene: From Biopolitical Sovereignty to Wonder Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-10-22 Vito De Lucia
The rise of the idea of the Anthropocene is promoting multiple reflections on its meaning. As we consider entering this new geological epoch, we realize the pervasiveness of humankind’s deconstruction and reconstruction of the Earth, in both geophysical and discursive terms. As the body of the Earth is marked and reshaped, so is its idea. From a hostile territory to be subjugated and exploited through
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In the Air of the Natural History Museum: On Corporate Entanglement and Responsibility in Uncontained Times Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-10-21 Lilian Moncrieff
This paper discusses corporate entanglement, impactfulness and responsibility in the Anthropocene, amidst events and conditions that ‘uncontain’ time. It takes its direction of travel from artist Brian Jungen’s ‘Cetology’ (2002), a whalebone sculpture made out of cut-up plastic garden chairs, which conjoins the times of earth and world history, as it hangs in the air of the art gallery, ‘as if’ exhibited
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Performing Defiance with Rights Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-10-12 Konstantine Eristavi
Against the well-established critical rejection of rights a growing literature in the tradition of agonistic democracy asserts their emancipatory role in the struggles for social change. However, agonistic theorists, invested as they are in the idea of democratic innovation as a process of gradual ‘augmentation’ of existing rules, institutions and practices, fail to account for the ruptural capacity
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Rhythms of Law: Aboriginal Jurisprudence and the Anthropocene Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-10-08 Kate Wright
On 1 December 2019, over one hundred Aboriginal nations performed ancestral and creation dances in synchrony across the Australian continent. One of the communities that danced was the Anaiwan nation from the north-eastern region of New South Wales, Australia. Since 2014 I have been working with Anaiwan people in a collaborative activist research project, creating and maintaining an Aboriginal community
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Legal Imaginaries and the Anthropocene: ‘Of’ and ‘For’ Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-10-03 Anna Grear
This reflection contrasts the dominant imaginary underlying ‘law of the Anthropocene’ with an imaginary reaching towards ‘law/s for the Anthropocene’. It does so primarily by contrasting two imaginaries of human embodiment—law’s existing imaginary of quasi-disembodiment and an alternative imaginary of embodiment as co-woven with the lively incipiencies and tendencies of matter. It draws on ‘transcorporeality’
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Melancholy of the Law Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-09-26 Przemyslaw Tacik
The paper attempts to construct a theoretical account of what melancholy—in a psychoanalytical and cultural sense—may mean for jurisprudence. It argues that the map of relations and displacements between the object and the subject that is associated with melancholy in different psychoanalytical approaches can be fruitfully adopted for understanding of normativity. Based on a thorough re-reading of
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An Apocalyptic Patent Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-09-19 Alain Pottage
It was originally suggested that the Anthropocene began in 1784, the date of James Watt’s patent for the rotative steam engine. Patent dates are interesting artefacts. They owe their existence to the chronopoietic technique of patent jurisprudence, which generates temporal sequences out of synchronous states of knowledge. This may not be geological time, but it informs the experience of time that is
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Re-storying Laws for the Anthropocene: Rights, Obligations and an Ethics of Encounter Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-09-17 Kathleen Birrell, Daniel Matthews
The Anthropocene prompts renewed critical reflection on some of the central tenets of modern thought including narratives of ‘progress’, the privileging of the nation state, and the universalist rendering of the human. In this context it is striking that ‘rights’, a quintessentially modern mode of articulating normativity, are often presumed to have an enduring relevance in the contemporary moment
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Obligations in the Anthropocene Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-09-16 Peter D. Burdon
The Anthropocene is a term described by Earth Systems Science to capture the recent rupture in the history of the Earth where human action has acquired the power to alter the Earth System as a whole. While normative conclusions cannot be logically derived from this descriptive fact, this paper argues that law and philosophy ought to develop responses that are ordered around human beings. Rather than
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Keys to Decrypt the Republic Against Democracy Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-08-13 Ricardo Sanín-Restrepo, Marinella Machado Araujo
The concept of the republic is a complex meta-principle that facilitates and conceals global relations of domination. Specifically, it enables the invisibility of racism as the core of political power. From its very origins the concept of republic serves to seize constituent power or politeia. In modernity, as it merges with private property, it will serve as the launchpad of a vast colonization project
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Consensus, Difference and Sexuality: Que(e)rying the European Court of Human Rights’ Concept of‘ European Consensus’ Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-07-18 Claerwen O’Hara
This paper provides a queer critique of the European Court of Human Rights’ use of ‘European consensus’ as a method of interpretation in cases concerning sexuality rights. It argues that by routinely invoking the notion of ‘consensus’ in such cases, the Court (re)produces discourses and induces performances of sexuality and Europeanness that emphasise sameness and agreement, while simultaneously suppressing
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Of Rebels and Disobedients: Reflections on Arendt, Race, Lawbreaking Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-07-15 Ayça Çubukçu
Hannah Arendt valued the unprecedented, the unexpected, and the new, yet in essays crafted at the end of the rebellious 1960s, struggled to square this valuation with a palpable desire for law and order. She lamented that criminality had overtaken American life, accused the police of not arresting enough criminals, and charged ‘the Negro community’ with standing behind what she named black violence
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Blasphemy in an Age of Corroding Secularity Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-06-13 Jasper Doomen
‘Sacred’ may be defined in various ways, depending on one’s worldview. In a pluralistic society, a single perspective from which to decide what is sacred seems absent. Yet certain elements are taken to be sacred such that they transcend individual worldviews. Their inviolability entails blasphemy laws, where ‘blasphemy’ extends beyond what is traditionally considered religious, since ‘religion’ itself
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The Spatio-Legal Production of Bodies Through the Legal Fiction of Death Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-06-12 Joshua David Michael Shaw
Definitions of death are often referred to as legal fictions since brain death was conceived in the mid-twentieth century. Reference to legal fiction is generally paired with bioethicists’ concern that it facilitates post-mortem tissue donation and the health system generally, by determining death earlier on the continuum of dying and availing more viable tissue and therapeutic resources for others
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Corporate Law Versus Social Autonomy: Law as Social Hazard Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-05-26 Michael Galanis
This article argues that corporate law has become the legal platform upon which is erected a social process impeding society’s capacity to lucidly reflect on its primary ends; in this sense, corporate law is in conflict with social autonomy. This process is described here as a social feedback loop, in the structural centre of which lies the corporation which imposes its own purpose as an irrational
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European Empires in Conflict: The Brexit Years Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-05-19 Patricia Tuitt
On 29 March 2017, the United Kingdom (UK) Government notified the European Council (EC) of its intention to withdraw from the European Union (EU) legal order. On 31 January 2020, the UK entered a transition period, during which it remains bound to the EU Treaty Framework. This review essay examines the near three-year period of the UK’s attempted cessation from the EU (Brexit). It argues that what
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Laws of Inclusion and Exclusion: Nomos, Nationalism and the Other Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-05-04 Liam Gillespie
This article explores how and why contemporary nationalist ‘defence leagues’ in Australia and the UK invoke fantasies of law. I argue these fantasies articulate with Carl Schmitt’s theory of ‘nomos’, which holds that law functions as a spatial order of reason that both produces and is produced by land qua the territory of the nation. To elucidate the ideological function of law for defence leagues
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The Responsible Migrant, Reading the Global Compact on Migration Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-04-24 Christina Oelgemöller, Kathryn Allinson
In 2016, the international community, in reaction to the growing number of ‘tragedies’ occurring as people attempted to move across borders, met to discuss large movements of refugees and migrants. The outcome of this meeting was an agreement to negotiate two Global Compacts, one on refugees and one on migrants, with the aim of facilitating ‘orderly, safe, regular and responsible migration and mobility
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What Constitution? On Chile’s Constitutional Awakening Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-04-01 Octavio Ansaldi, María Pardo-Vergara
This paper explores the political awakening of the Chilean people that began in October 2019. It puts forward an alternative reading of the people’s claim for a new constitution. The first section briefly describes the October outcry and provides some context with regards to the nature of the social movement at its root. The two following sections examine two periods in Chilean recent history, the
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Introduction: Chile’s ‘Constituent Moment’ Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-04-01 Emilios Christodoulidis, Marco Goldoni
The introduction looks at the constitutional situation in Chile since the demand for a new Constitution erupted in demonstrations all across the country, and argues that the notion of ‘constitutional moment’ is inadequate to capture the radicality of the popular mobilisation that is sweeping the country as a pure expression of constituent power.
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Constituent Moment, Constituted Powers in Chile Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-03-24 Fernando Atria
This article discusses the concept of constituent power and its application to the situation in Chile after the 18th October 2019. In particular, it discusses the relation between constituted and constituent powers, with a view to understanding the significance of the 15 November Agreement that opened the way for the ongoing constituent process.
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Is the Constitution the Trap? Decryption and Revolution in Chile Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-03-18 Ricardo Sanín-Restrepo, Marinella Machado Araujo
We will examine the revolts, begun in October of 2019, and currently developing in Chile under three conjoined parts. First, we will not try to theoretically ‘tame’ the revolutionary creature, but rather to plug immanently into the energy of the ‘potentia’ of the revolutionary event. To this extent, we will highlight the shortcomings of a theoretical enterprise that intends to explain it in traditional
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Feeling Things: From Visual to Material Jurisprudence Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-03-13 Kate West
In this article I analyse the extent to which there has been a shift in the cultural turn in legal scholarship and specifically from visual to what I call material jurisprudence, that is from visual to material ways of knowing law. I do so through an analysis of Desmond Manderson’s edited collection, Law and the Visual: Representations, Technologies, Critique (2018a), and Katherine Biber’s monograph
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Experimenting with Law: Brecht on Copyright Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-01-31 Jose Bellido
Can one reject copyright law and be a qualified observer of its dispositives? This question was taken up by Bertolt Brecht in an intriguing essay concerning the litigation surrounding the film adaptation of The Threepenny Opera (1928). Brecht here develops an experimental observation around the nature of film adaptation and cultural production in copyright. While an experimental approach to law was
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Spinoza’s Conception of Personal and Political Change: A Feminist Perspective Law and Critique Pub Date : 2020-01-08 Janice Richardson
By focusing upon three figures: a trade unionist, who can no longer understand or reconcile himself with his past misogynist behaviour; Spinoza’s Spanish poet, who loses his memory and can no longer write poetry or even recognise his earlier work; and Spinoza’s lost friend, Burgh, who became a devout Catholic, I draw out Spinoza’s description of radical change in beliefs. I explore how, for Spinoza
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I Nomi Degli Dei: A Reconsideration of Agamben’s Oath Complex Law and Critique Pub Date : 2019-12-10 Robert S. Leib
This essay offers an exegesis and critique of the moment of community formation in Agamben’s Homo Sacer Project. In The Sacrament of Language, Agamben searches for the site of a non-sovereign community founded upon the oath [horkos, sacramentum]: an ancient institution of language that produces and guarantees the connection between speech and the order of things by calling the god as a witness to the
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On Crime and Punishment: Derrida Reading Kant Law and Critique Pub Date : 2019-12-10 Jacques De Ville
This essay enquires into the implications for criminal law of Derrida’s analysis in the Death Penalty seminars. The seminars include a reading of Kant’s Metaphysics of Morals , specifically Kant’s reflections on the sovereign right to punish, which is read in conjunction with the reflections of Freud and Reik on the relation between the unconscious and crime, as well as Nietzsche’s reflections on morality
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Across Islands and Oceans: Re-imagining Colonial Violence in the Past and the Present Law and Critique Pub Date : 2019-11-01 Honni Van Rijswijk, Anthea Vogl
The three texts addressed in this review essay challenge us to question and creatively re-imagine the representation of material spaces at the centre of the colonial project: oceans, islands, ships and archives. Elizabeth McMahon deconstructs the island and its metaphorics, charting the relationship of geography, politics and literature through the changing status of islands, as imagined by colonists
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Correction to: Rethinking Critique: Becoming Clinician Law and Critique Pub Date : 2019-11-01 Leticia Da Costa Paes
The article Rethinking Critique: Becoming Clinician, written by Leticia Da Costa Paes, was originally published electronically on the publisher’s internet portal (currently SpringerLink) on 24 September 2019 with open access.
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Inhabiting the Ruins of Neoliberalism: Space, Catastrophe and Utopia Law and Critique Pub Date : 2019-09-27 Chris Butler
In Robinson in Ruins, the third of Patrick Keiller’s trilogy of fictionalised documentaries concerning the wanderings and speculations of an unseen protagonist, the narrator informs us that Robinson had been reading Karl Polanyi’s The Great Transformation, which ‘locates the origin of twentieth century catastrophe in the development of market society in England’. Polanyi identifies how the self-regulating
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From Cairo to Jerusalem: Law, Labour, Time and Catastrophe Law and Critique Pub Date : 2019-09-24 Mai Taha
Following the eclectic itineraries of ‘Near East’ expert, R. M. Graves, this article tells a story of an ongoing Nakba (catastrophe) of small and large legal decisions. Without reducing the human catastrophe of the event of the Nakba (the 1948 Palestinian forced exodus), it engages with it as a legal event that crosses (in this story at least) from Cairo to Jerusalem, from the League of Nations’ era
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Rethinking Critique: Becoming Clinician Law and Critique Pub Date : 2019-09-24 Leticia Da Costa Paes
Today, capitalism functions as a very complex tool of colonisation capturing our desires, dreams, and putting life itself at risk. Its effects lead us all to times of extreme anxiety increasing the number of people with mental health problems. This paper is concerned with the question of ‘critique’ within this context. How can critical legal scholarship engage with a theoretical mode that allows us
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Negative Mythology Law and Critique Pub Date : 2019-09-18 Shane Chalmers
Can mythology be a form of critical theory in the service of right? From the standpoint of an Enlightenment tradition, the answer is no. Mythology is characterised by irrationality, and works to mystify reality, whilst critical theory is set against the irrational, its entire force directed at demystifying reality. In a post-Enlightenment tradition, reason, including critical reason, may take mythological
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Legal Education Beyond the Academy: The Neoliberal Reorientation of Public Legal Education Law and Critique Pub Date : 2019-05-09 Lisa Wintersteiger
In order to re-make the world in its own image, neoliberal expansionism is predicated on the dominance of a particular regime of reason. The dominance of economic-juridical rationality relies in no small part on education to reproduce itself. In this sense, how and why a populace is educated in the law becomes a locus of struggle and of alternative and competing constructions of normative and political
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Against Exclusion: Teaching Transsystemically, Learning in Community Law and Critique Pub Date : 2019-05-09 Sara Ramshaw
In September 2018 the University of Victoria Faculty of Law on Vancouver Island, Canada welcomed its first cohort of students to its cutting edge and innovative joint degree programme in Canadian Common Law (Juris Doctor (JD)) and Indigenous Legal Orders (Juris Indigenarum Doctor (JID)). The JD/JID programme draws on the law faculty’s more than two decades of experience and research on Indigenous legal
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Regulatory Threats to the Law Degree: The Solicitors Qualifying Examination and the Purpose of Law Schools Law and Critique Pub Date : 2019-05-04 Richard Bowyer
Two major regulatory changes are affecting the provision of undergraduate legal education in England and Wales. On the one hand, the Qualifying Law Degree is being deregulated, meaning law schools are free to make significant changes to how and what they teach. On the other hand, higher education in England has seen a significant overhaul through the creation of the Office for Students, which treats
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The Contradictions of Conscience: Unravelling the Structure of Obligation in Equity Law and Critique Pub Date : 2019-04-16 Matthew Stone
Conscience rests within the heart of equity, yet it is a manifestly nebulous and contradictory concept. In particular, equity has never been clear about exactly whose conscience we are concerned with: the Chancellor or judge, or the court, or the defendant? Furthermore, in some lights conscience appears to compel obedience to the authority of law, whilst in others it gives expression to ethical drives
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On the Undecidability of Legal and Technological Regulation Law and Critique Pub Date : 2019-04-13 Peter Kalulé
Generally, regulation is thought of as a constant that carries with it both a formative and conservative power, a power that standardises, demarcates and forms an order, through procedures, rules and precedents. It is dominantly thought that the singularity and formalisation of structures like rules is what enables regulation to achieve its aim of identifying, apprehending, sanctioning and forestalling/pre-empting
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Property and the Interests of Things: The Case of the Donative Trust Law and Critique Pub Date : 2019-04-12 Johanna Jacques
Within a liberal, ‘law of things’ understanding of property, the donative trust is seen as a species of gift. Control over trust property passes from the hands of settlors to beneficiaries, from owners to owners. Trust property, like all other property, is silent and passive, its fate determined by its owners. This article questions this understanding of the trust by showing how beneath the facade
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Law of Denial Law and Critique Pub Date : 2019-01-23 Başak Ertür
Law’s claim of mastery over past political violence is frequently undermined by reversals of that relationship of mastery, so that the violence of the law, and especially its symbolic violence, becomes easily incorporated into longues durées of political violence, rather than mastering them, settling them, or providing closure. Doing justice to the past, therefore, requires a political and theoretical
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Policies, Technology and Markets: Legal Implications of Their Mathematical Infrastructures Law and Critique Pub Date : 2019-01-09 Marcus Faro de Castro
The paper discusses legal implications of the expansion of practical uses of mathematics in social life. Taking as a starting point the omnipresence of mathematical infrastructures underlying policies, technology and markets, the paper proceeds by attending to relevant materials offered by general philosophy, legal philosophy, and the history and philosophy of mathematics. The paper suggests that the
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From Social Uprising to Legal Form Law and Critique Pub Date : 2018-12-19 Anastasia Tataryn
Does, or should, social uprising lead to new legal form? Ukraine’s current situation following the Revolution of Dignity in 2013–2014, with continuing violent conflict in Donbas and Crimea, suggests that not only is it unclear how a ‘new’ form is assessed, but existing transitional policies and frameworks are unlikely to be clearly implemented and enforced. An alternative analysis of transformation
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Reproducing Whiteness: Feminist Genres, Legal Subjectivity and the Post-racial Dystopia of The Handmaid’s Tale (2017-) Law and Critique Pub Date : 2018-10-22 Karen Crawley
This article investigates the critical potential of a contemporary dystopia, The Handmaid’s Tale (Miller 2017-), a U.S. television series adapted from a popular novel by Canadian author Margaret Atwood (1985). The text is widely understood as a feminist intervention that speaks to ongoing struggles against gender oppression, but in this article I consider the invitations that the show offers its viewers
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‘Life is Not Simply Fact’: Aesthetics, Atmosphere and the Neoliberal University Law and Critique Pub Date : 2018-10-20 Karin Van Marle
The main objective of this article is to reflect on the way in which a certain neoliberal logic and rationality have become common-sense and to contemplate the possibility of a different aesthetic. The tone or mood of this piece draws on recent work on atmosphere, affect and complexity, which will be used to explore the theme of neoliberalism within the context of the university. In the course of this
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Why Does the State Keep Coming Back? Neoliberalism, the State and the Archeon Law and Critique Pub Date : 2018-10-05 James Martel
In this essay I argue that the distinction between neoliberalism and the Westphalian order that is said to precede it (along with populism, authoritarianism and other contemporary phenomenon) are all facets of one and the same phenomenon: archism. Archism is a style of politics based on rule and division. Looking at the work of Derrida, Foucault and Benjamin, I examine the inner workings of archism
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Corporations, Sovereignty and the Religion of Neoliberalism Law and Critique Pub Date : 2018-10-04 Timothy D. Peters
This article seeks to contribute to the thinking of forms of corporateness, sociality and authority in the context of, but also beyond, neoliberalism, the neoliberal state and neoliberal accounts of the corporation. It considers neoliberalism in relation to the theological genealogies of modernity, politics and economy, and the way in which neoliberalism itself functions as a secular religion—one which
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State Power, the Politics of Debt and Confronting Neoliberal Authoritarianism Law and Critique Pub Date : 2018-10-03 Chris Butler
As an intellectual, economic, political and legal project, neoliberalism is not directed towards the rolling back of the state as an aim in itself. While its deregulatory tendencies, its commodification of public services and the undermining of systems of social welfare superficially suggest a generalised reduction in state power, it has been clear from the early 1980s that one of neoliberalism’s primary
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Forms of Authority Beyond the Neoliberal State: Sovereignty, Politics and Aesthetics Law and Critique Pub Date : 2018-09-28 Chris Butler, Karen Crawley
Critical legal scholarship has recently turned to consider the form, mode and role of law in neoliberal governance. A central theme guiding much of this literature is the importance of understanding neoliberalism as not only a political or economic phenomenon, but also an inherently juridical one. This article builds on these conceptualisations of neoliberalism in turning to explore the wider historical
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Modern Constitutional Legitimacy and Political Theology: Schmitt, Peterson and Blumenberg Law and Critique Pub Date : 2018-08-10 Nathan Gibbs
In this article, an important set of general themes will be examined in relation to the ongoing problematization of the legitimacy of modern constitutionalism within a body of work that largely draws on Carl Schmitt’s political theology. In particular, however, the themes discussed in this article will focus on the later, post-war stages of his work contained in the brief, but dense volume entitled
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Blockchain Control Law and Critique Pub Date : 2018-05-30 Jannice Käll
Blockchain technology is often discussed and theorized in relation to cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin. Its quality as a technology that produces advanced encryption keys between objects, however, also makes it interesting to those who seek to connect physical objects to digital elements. The reason for this is that the link between objects needs to be ‘secure’ from undesired external interference
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Legal Engineering on the Blockchain: ‘Smart Contracts’ as Legal Conduct Law and Critique Pub Date : 2018-05-19 Jake Goldenfein, Andrea Leiter
A new legal field is emerging around blockchain platforms and automated transactions. Understanding the relationships between law, legal enforcement, and these technological systems has become critical for scaling blockchain applications. Because ‘smart contracts’ do not themselves constitute agreements, the first necessary ‘legal’ development for transacting with these technologies involves linking
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No Gods, No Masters, No Coders? The Future of Sovereignty in a Blockchain World Law and Critique Pub Date : 2018-05-17 Sarah Manski, Ben Manski
The building of the blockchain is predicted to harken the end of the contemporary sovereign order. Some go further to claim that as a powerful decentering technology, blockchain contests the continued functioning of world capitalism. Are such claims merited? In this paper we consider sovereignty and blockchain technology theoretically, posing possible futures for sovereignty in a blockchain world.
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Taking Blockchain Seriously Law and Critique Pub Date : 2018-05-12 Robert Herian
In the present techno-political moment it is clear that ignoring or dismissing the hype surrounding blockchain is unwise, and certainly for regulatory authorities and governments who must keep a grip on the technology and those promoting it, in order to ensure democratic accountability and regulatory legitimacy within the blockchain ecosystem and beyond. Blockchain is telling (and showing) us something
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