Stateless Law: Evolving Boundaries of a Discipline
In: Juris Diversitas
Cover Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- List of Abbreviations of Periodical Titles Cited in this Collection -- Notes on Contributors -- Preface and Acknowledgements -- Foreword -- Prologue -- 1 Stateless Law: Before, Inside and Outside the Law of the State -- Part I Introduction: Situating Stateless Law -- 2 Stating Boundaries: The Law, Disciplined -- 3 Teaching Law: 'Historian and Prophet All in One' -- Part II The 'Discipline' of Stateless Law -- 4 Back to the Future -- 5 Law as an Academic Discipline -- 6 Doctrinal Knowledge, Legal Doctrinal Scholarship and the Problem of Interdisciplinary Engagement -- 7 The Structure of Stateless Law -- Part III The Forms and Aspirations of Stateless Law -- 8 Brève théorie culturelle du droit -- 9 Un-stating Law -- 10 The Study of Legal Plurality outside 'Legal Pluralism': The Future of the Discipline? -- 11 Stateless Law: From Legitimacy to Validity -- 12 Non ratione imperii, sed imperio rationis -- Part IV The Practice, Teaching and Learning of Stateless Law -- 13 Thinking, Doing, Being: Why 'Practising' Law Matters to the Prevention of Torture -- 14 Qu'est-ce qu'une « faculté » de droit? De la philosophie au droit -- 15 Everything Old Is New Again: Stateless Law, the State of the Law Schools and Comparative Legal/Normative History -- 16 The Impact of 'Stateless Law' on Legal Pedagogy -- Epilogue -- 17 What Lies Before, Behind and Beneath a Case? Five Minutes on Transnational Lawyering and the Consequences for Legal Education