Interrupting the Legal Person

Austin Sarat
Emerald
Emerald

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Hardback
9781802628685
28 March 2022
$115.99
eBook (PDF)
9781802628678
28 March 2022
$115.99
eBook (ePub)
9781802628692
28 March 2022
$115.99

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  • Description
  • Contents
  • About

This special issue is part two 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.

Chapter 1. My Story, Whose Memory: Notes on the Autonomy and Heteronomy of Law; Stewart Motha

  • Chapter 2. The Ship, the Slave, the Legal Person; Renisa Mawani
  • Chapter 3. Working for the Man in the 21st Century: Algorithms, Employment Regulation and the Market; Keally McBride
  • Chapter 4. Revelation and Legal Personhood; Linda Ross Meyer
  • Chapter 5. Sovereign Images and Contested Jurisdictions: Legal Personhood in BC Colonial Law and Through the Writ of Habeas Corpus; Matthew Unger
  • Chapter 6. Trial Personae and the Opacity of the Past; Martha Merrill Umphrey
  • Chapter 7. Interrupting the Legal Person: On Techniques and Grammars of Law?; Mark Antaki and Alexandra Popovici

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.