Poole Place of Law - Spring Spring The Place of Law. Wednesday 1:00-3:00 Macauley 400

Similar documents
Graduate Seminar John Comaroff University of Chicago. Legal Anthropology: Advanced Seminar

Theories and Methods in the Humanities: Rethinking Violence IPH 405

LAW AND ORDER L.A. LAS 4935 / LAS 6938 / ANG6930 / ANT4930. Spring Wednesday 3-5 period (9:35-12:35) Location: Grinter 376

Anth Anthropology of Intervention: Development, Human Rights, Humanitarianism. Fall 2007

Global Law Bibliography Primer Monographs:

ANTH/LAS/ 391 Neoliberalism, Indigenous Peoples and the State SPRING 2018 Tuesdays 2-5PM SAC 5.124

School of Undergraduate Studies. Ambedkar University Delhi. Course Outline

Philosophy of Law in the Arctic

PHL 370: PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION (Fall 2012) TR 1:40-2:55 Linfield Hall 234

The Anthropology of Human Rights. Sally Engle Merry Department of Anthropology Spring 2007 G G L06.

Foucault on Politics, Security and War

Anthropology of Power 21:070:306 Spring 2017

Required Text Friedrich D., Law in Our Lives: An Introduction 2 Ed; Oxford University Press TABLE OF CONTENTS

DEGREES IN HIGHER EDUCATION M.A.,

467 Schermerhorn Hall 456 Schermerhorn Hall

Geography 320H1 Geographies of Transnationalism, Migration, and Gender Fall Term, 2015

State, Law and Politics in Society L , G and G Furman Hall, Rm 316 Wednesday: 4:05-5:55

Foundations of Institutional Theory. A block seminar in the winter term of 2012/13. Wolfgang Streeck, Max-Planck-Institut für Gesellschaftsforschung

Power, Oppression, and Justice Winter 2014/2015 (Semester IIa) Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, Faculty of Philosophy

The Jurisprudence of Emergency

Democracy and Justice

IDEA OF INDIVIDUALITY IN POLITICAL THOUGHT

LAHORE UNIVERSITY OF MANAGEMENT SCIENCES (LUMS) SHAIKH AHMAD HASSAN SCHOOL OF LAW. LAW 310 Jurisprudence. Fall 2017

ANTH 231 Crime in Latin America (Syllabus is subject to change. Check Moodle for latest version) Tues / Thurs 10:10 11:30a HEG 201

Sociology of Law. Sociology Department, University of Toronto SOC6306H, Fall 2017

Modern Political Thinkers and Ideas

SYLLABUS: EDS 245 HUMAN RIGHTS AND INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT. Spring Parallel 2013

Colloquium on State Failure, Warlords, and Pirates Political Science BC 3812 Spring 2012 Tuesdays 2:10-4:00pm

Course Outline. LAWS 3908C Legal Studies Methods and Theory II

The European Union in Search of a Democratic and Constitutional Theory

HIS567 The Enlightenment and the French Revolution Spring 2016

Foucault: Bodies in Politics Course Description

McMaster University, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science,

Political Science 103 Spring, 2018 Dr. Edward S. Cohen INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

University of Florida Spring 2017 CONTEMPORARY SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY SYA 6126, Section 1F83

The Sociology of Law

World Politics. Seminar Instructor: Pauline Brücker Academic Year: 2016/2017 Spring Semester

ANG 6930 Dissertation Writing

HIS567 The Enlightenment and the French Revolution Fall 2011

Armitage, David. The British Atlantic World, / Braddick, M. J.; ; (Michael J.),.

Middle Eastern Revolutions Political Science 450/Middle Eastern Studies 495 Meeting time: T, TH 9:30-10:45am 793 SWKT

NOTE: THIS IS PRELIMINARY AND I M CERTAIN TO CHANGE THIS

City University of Hong Kong

POLITICAL SCIENCE 260B. Proseminar in American Political Institutions Spring 2003

Comparative Law and Society

RUCHI CHATURVEDI Department of Sociology, University of Cape Town

University of Maryland. Department of Government and Politics

Contemporary Societies

The Sociology of Law

POL 192b: Constitutional Theory and Design Spring 2014 Olin-Sang 212 M, W 3:30 4:40PM

Political Science 582: Global Security

Menchaca Spring 2013 Anth 389K/LAS 391/MAS392 W /40645/36250 SAC AMERICAN IMMIGRANT CULTURAL EXPERIENCES

Power and Organizations

Democratic Theory. Wednesdays, 3:30-6:00pm Room: 1115 BSB

The Methodology of Legal Theory Volume I

QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY Department of Political Studies POLS 350 History of Political Thought 1990/91 Fall/Winter

Anthropology of Global Aid ANTH 663 Spring 2015, MW 1:30-2:45 University of Hawai`i at Manoa

POLS Global Political Theory Spring 2009 MWF 12-12:50pm Maybank 307 Dr. Kea Gorden

IS 309 Special Topics Transitional Justice: Confronting the Past, Building the Future Simon Fraser University School for International Studies Spring

Power and Social Change IIS/GFS 50 Fall 2008 (This syllabus is posted on Sakai)

POL 10a: Introduction to Political Theory Spring 2017 Room: Golding 101 T, Th 2:00 3:20 PM

Libertarianism. Polycarp Ikuenobe A N I NTRODUCTION

Violence and Revolution in Political Thought (16 th -17 th century) [PP5559]

Comparative Law. Abstract

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY Department of Politics V COMPARATIVE POLITICS Spring Michael Laver. Tel:

JENNIFER L. CULBERT EDUCATION

METHOD OF PRESENTATION

SAMPLE CHAPTERS UNESCO EOLSS POWER AND THE STATE. John Scott Department of Sociology, University of Plymouth, UK

What is a constitution? Do all democracies have them? Does a constitution protect citizens rights?

Political Science 399: Democracy and Discipline

PS 502: The Moral Foundations of Democracy Syllabus

GOVT International Relations Theory Credits: 3 (NR)

PS 580: Introduction to Methods of Political Science Research Fall 2006: Christopher K. Butler

PHIL 3226: Social and Political Philosophy, Fall 2009 TR 11:00-12:15, Denny 216 Dr. Gordon Hull

Phil 183 Topics in Continental Philosophy

This course will analyze contemporary migration at the urban, national and

Markets and Governance in a Post-secular Society: an Introduction to Economic Theology

CONTEMPORARY SOCIETIES AND CULTURES: FOUNDATIONS OF THE STATE AND SOCIETY

SOCIOLOGY (SOC) Explanation of Course Numbers

Class on Class. Lecturer: Gáspár Miklós TAMÁS. 2 credits, 4 ECTS credits Winter semester 2013 MA level

Course Objectives: 1) To understand the relationship between religion and immigration in U.S. history and society

POLS 110: Introduction to Political Science (WI)

Sociology 3410: Early Sociological Theory

The final exam will be closed-book.

226 Bay State Road, Room 203. HI525: Development in Historical Perspective

SOCI 537: Political Sociology

Theories of Regulation (410115) 1

POLS 210/310, Spring 2013

HISTORY 600: European Enlightenment: Culture and Society Prof. Desan Tuesday 1:20-3:20

Prof. Kenneth Mayer II, Monday, 10:00AM-12:00PM Office Hours: just about anytime 1 CLASSICS IN AMERICAN POLITICS

The Sociology of Law

PLAN 619 Fall 2014 Cultural Diversity in Planning University of Hawai`i, Department of Urban & Regional Planning

International Political Economy: PSCI 304 Middlebury College Fall 2014 Professor: Adam Dean

RELATIONSHIP OF THE COURSE TO OTHER INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS COURSES

Political Science 306 Contemporary Democratic Theory Peter Breiner

Sociology of corruption

Charles Baldwin, ENGL 693, Fall 2006 ENGL 693: Special Topics

Prof. David Canon Fall Semester Wednesday, 1:20-3:15, 422 North Hall and by appointment

Political Science 103 Fall, 2015 Dr. Edward S. Cohen INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

Sociology Semester-I. Semester-II. Semester-III. Semester-IV

Transcription:

Poole Place of Law - Spring 2012 1 Spring 2012 070.655 The Place of Law Wednesday 1:00-3:00 Macauley 400 Law is a system of rules and agreements that governs and guides social life. Regardless of whether these rules are grounded in legislative codes or unwritten traditions, law gains force and definition--through its claims to universality, and hence placelessness. In European political theory, both the sovereign power that animates understandings of law as command (Austin, Hobbes) and the notions of nature and divinity that underwrite ideas of natural law (Rousseau) assign an origin to law that is sanctified as both universal and out of place. In modern states, the dispersion of authority in regulatory and soft law further attenuate law s appeal to location and its normative grounds in social and political life. Anthropologists, on the other hand, have often engaged law through idioms of locality, singularity, and place. They have debated whether local traditions and customs can be said to constitute broader legal principles and systems; they have explored the ways in which local cultural and symbolic systems shape legal interpretation; and they have looked at the ways in which state-enforced legalities shape and constrain local political and economic life. Although these approaches to law differ, what unites them is a concern with understanding how law is marked by the place from which it invokes either custom or command. At stake as well, are the twin questions of what constitutes law, and If it is indeed possible to think of a law that is not itself grounded in the modes of emplacement and representation that constitute the state? Through readings drawn from anthropology, legal studies, and philosophy, this course explores the relationship of law to place. What affective force does law gain through its appeal to origins and place? How does law localize ideals of belonging, community and tradition? We begin by asking how place is inscribed in the ideals of sovereignty and nature that underwrite European liberal philosophies of law, norm and social contract. We then consider how law situates the limits of the social, and how the figure of law changes when we approach it as a more diffuse system of creativity, interpretation and affect. Finally we explore how the spatializing idioms of sovereignty and jurisdiction are unsettled in both regulatory regimes of governance and indigenous concepts of deterritorialized community. Requirements: This course will be run as a seminar. In addition to completing all assigned readings and participating fully in all class discussions, students are responsible for: a) the preparation and presentation of at least one seminar report in which they highlight important points in the assigned readings. This should not be a summary of the reading(s), but rather a thought-piece meant to stimulate discussion, voice your concerns or queries about the text, and bring out points of comparison with other texts and authors we have 1

Poole Place of Law - Spring 2012 2 read in class. Each week the student (or students) responsible for presenting the readings should also circulate, by email, a list of questions or points for discussion in that week s class. This list should be circulated by email at least 24 hours before the class meets (ie, teh Tuesday morning before teh class in which you will initiate teh seminar discussion). To further facilitate discussion, students can also circulate written versions of their seminar report in advance, although they are not required to do so. b) A 8-10 page mid-term essay, to be handed in on Monday March 26. c) A final 10-20 page research paper due on May 19. For the final research paper, students can choose to develop an empirical or ethnographic materials from their own research in conversation with the texts and theoretical approaches discussed in class; or to develop an extended theoretical discussion of law and place that draws from assigned and additional texts. An abstract and working bibliography for the final paper shoudl be turned into the instructor by April 13. Advances on the final paper will be discussed in class during the final two weeks of the semester. Schedule of readings: February 1. Introduction February 8. J-J. Rousseau. The Social Contract (1762) read esplly. Books I and II Thomas Hobbes. 1651. Leviathan. London: Penguin Classics. Read: Chapters XIV & XV. (pp.189-217 of Penguin edition) February 15. Jacques Derrida. The Force of Law In D. Cornell, M. Rosenfeld, & DG Carlson, eds. Deconstruction and the Possibility of Justice, pp. 3-65 Robert Cover. Violence and the word. In M Minow, M. Ryan & A. Sarat, eds., Narrative, Violence and the Law: The Essays of Robert Cover, pp. 203-238. Ann Arbor: Univ. of Michigan Press 2

Poole Place of Law - Spring 2012 3 Walter Benjamin. 1986. Critique of Violence. In Reflections, pp.277-300. New York: Shocken February 22. Michel Foucault. 2007 Security, Territory Population. Lectures at the College de France 1977-1978; read pp. 1-86 (Lectures 1-3). New York: Palgrave Macmillan. Francois Ewald. Norms, Discipline and the Law, Representations, 30(Spring 1990): 138-161 Mitchell Dean. 2001. Demonic Societies: Format: liberalism, biopolitics, and sovereignty. In F. Stepputat & T. Hansen, eds. States of Imagination: Ethnographic Exploratiosn of the Postcoloial State, pp. 41-64. Durham & London: Duke University Press February 29. Emile Durkheim. 1983. Durkheim and the Law. Stephen Lukes, editor. NEw York: Saint Martin s Press read : Law as an Index of Social Solidarity, From Repressive to Restitutory Law, Crime and Punishment, and The Nature of Contract. Pp. 1-101, 192-236. March 7. Bronislaw Malinowski. Crime and custom in Savage Society (1926). London: Kegan Paul. March 14 Sally Falk Moore. 1978. Law as Social Process: An Anthropological Approach. Routledge. Read Chapter 2: Law and Social Change: the Semi-Autonomous Social Field as an Appropriate Object of Study pp. 54-81. Mariana Valverde. 2003. Law s Dream of a Common Knowledge. Princeton: Princeton University Press; read Introduction and Chapter 7 (pp. 1-27 & 167-192) 3

Poole Place of Law - Spring 2012 4 March 21. Spring Break (no class) March 26. Midterm Essay due. March 28. Juan Obarrio. 2010. Beyond Equivalence: The Gift of Justice in Mozambique, Anthropological Theory, 10(1):1-8 Rachel Sieder. 2010. Legal Cultures in the (Un)rule of Law: Indigenous Rights and Juridification in Guatemala. In R. Sieder, J. Cousa & A. Huneeus, eds. Cultured of Legality: Judicialization and Political Activism in Latin America, pp. 161-181. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press Sally Merry. 1998. Law, culture and cultural appropriation, Yale Journal of Law and the Humanities, 575-603 G. Teubner. 1992. The Two faces of Janus: Rethinking Legal Pluralism, Cardozo Law Review, 1443. April 4. April 11. Karena Shaw. 2008. Adjudication: Paradoxes of Law and Sovereignty. In Indigeneity and Political theory: Sovereignty and the limits of the Political, p. 107-135. New York & London: Routledge Claire Colebrook. 2009. Legal theory After Deleuze. In Rosi Braidotti, Claire Colebrook, Patrick Hanifin (eds.). Deleuze and Law: Forensic Events, pp.6-24. New York: Palgrave Macmillan R Ford. 1999. Law s Territory: A History of Jurisdiction. Michigan Law Review, Vol.97:843-930 Filippo M. Zerilli. 2010. The rule of soft law: An introduction. Focaal, 56:3-18 Gunther Teubner. Global Bukowina: Legal pluralism in the world society. In G. Teubner, ed. Global Law without a state, pp.3-28. Brookfield; DArtmouth 4

Poole Place of Law - Spring 2012 5 Sally Merry. 2006. Anthropology and International Law. Annual Review of Anthropology, 35:99-116 Anna di Robilant. 2006. Genealogies of Soft Law. American Journal of Comparative Law, 54(3):499-554 April 13. Annotated bibliography and abstract for final paper due April 18. Kristin Bergtora Sandvik. 2011. Blurring boundaries: REfugee Resettlement in Kampala: Between the Formal, the Informal and teh Illegal. PoLAR, 34(1):11-32 David Szablowski. 2007. The World Bank Safeguard Policy Regime: A Globalising Regulatory Model, In D. Szablowski, Transnational Law and Local Struggles: Mining, Communities and the World Bank, pp. 101-136 (Hart Monographs in Transaitonal and International Law) Arun Agrawal. 2010. Environment, Community, Government. In I. Feldman & M. Ticktin, eds. In the Name of Humanity: The Government of Threat and Care, pp. 190-217. Durham, NC y London: Duke University Press April 25 & May 2. Discussion of final Paper projects May 9. Study Week May 19. Final papers due. No incompletes will be granted 5