Skip to product information
1 of 1

Interrupting the Legal Person

Regular price $115.99
Sale price $115.99 Regular price $115.99
Sale Sold out
This special issue is part one of a two-part edited collection on interrupting the legal person, and what this means. The chapters in this volume interrogate the role of the person and personhood i...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 28 March 2022
View Product Details

This special issue is part one of a two-part edited collection on interrupting the legal person, and what this means. Should we think of the legal person as a technical and grammatical question that varies across different legal traditions and jurisdictions? Does this cut across different ways of living and speaking law?

The chapters in this volume interrogate the role of the person and personhood in different contexts, jurisdictions, and legal traditions. This volume is an appealing read for anyone interested in rich contemporary conversations around legal personhood, and in interrupting and interrogating assumptions which we may take for granted.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $115.99
Pages: 128
Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
Imprint: Emerald Publishing Limited
Series: Studies in Law, Politics, and Society
Publication Date: 28 March 2022
ISBN: 9781802628647
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, Sociology, POLITICAL SCIENCE / General, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / Social Theory, Political science and theory, Political structure and processes

Austin Sarat is William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science at Amherst College, USA. He has written, co-written, or edited more than ninety books in the fields of law and political science.

Chapter 1. Reframing Colonial Law's Criminally Accused Persons; George Pavlich
Chapter 2. Gitxsan Legal Personhood: Gendered; Val Napoleon
Chapter 3. Foucault's Perhaps: Madness, Suffering and the Interruption of Legal Personality in Foucault, Supiot and Hegel; Johan Van Der Walt
Chapter 4. Interrupting the Legal Person: Thinking Responsibility with Hannah Arendt; Jennifer L. Culbert
Chapter 5. The Role of the Person in Modern Constitutional Law: How State-Inflicted Harms Become Personal; Richard Mailey
Chapter 6. The Biopolitics of Settler Colonialism and the Limits of Foucault’s Historical Method; Amy Swiffen and Shoshana Paget
Chapter 7. Interrupted by Death: The Legal Personhood and Non-Personhood of Corpses; James R. Martel