Legal Geography (eBook, ePUB)
Perspectives and Methods
Redaktion: O'Donnell, Tayanah; Gillespie, Josephine; Robinson, Daniel F.
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Legal Geography (eBook, ePUB)
Perspectives and Methods
Redaktion: O'Donnell, Tayanah; Gillespie, Josephine; Robinson, Daniel F.
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This book is the first legal geography book to explicitly engage in method. It complements this by also bringing together different perspectives on the emerging school of legal geography. It explores human-environment interactions and showcases distinct environmental legal geography scholarship.
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This book is the first legal geography book to explicitly engage in method. It complements this by also bringing together different perspectives on the emerging school of legal geography. It explores human-environment interactions and showcases distinct environmental legal geography scholarship.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 328
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Dezember 2019
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780429760563
- Artikelnr.: 58355205
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 328
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Dezember 2019
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780429760563
- Artikelnr.: 58355205
Tayanah O'Donnell has over ten years' experience focused on the law and the legal geographies of climate change adaptation. Her papers and research cover themes such as property rights, land use planning, climate law, coastal policy and management, and the legal, political and cultural impacts of climate change regulation. Daniel F. Robinson has more than 15 years' experience focused on the regulation of nature and knowledge. His papers and books cover themes including "biopiracy", access and benefit-sharing relating to biological resources, appropriation and regulation of Indigenous knowledge, Indigenous/customary laws and biocultural protocols, ethical biotrade, political ecology, environmental policy and management. Josephine Gillespie is an academic, and former lawyer, based at the University of Sydney, Australia. She is an environmental legal geographer interested in the complex intersection of geography and law. Her research investigates environmental protection and human-environment geographies throughout Australia and the Asia-Pacific.
Contributors. Acknowledgements. Part 1: Introduction 1. An Australasian and
Asia-Pacific approach to legal geography. Part 2: Investigating the legal
geographies of Indigenous peoples and local communities and their
environments 2. Challenges in legal geography research methodologies in
cross-cultural settings. 3. Asserting land rights through technology and
democratic expression: the effect of the Indigenous Peoples Alliance of the
Archipelago v Indonesia case. 4. Islam, legal geography and methodological
challenges in Indonesia. 5. Patent landscaping for Vanuatu: specific legal
geographic methods for Indigenous knowledge protection and promotion. 6.
Consulting the consultators: a Kaupapa M¿ori-informed approach to
uncovering Indigenous jurisdiction and shifting the research gaze. Part 3:
Investigating the legal geographies of regulation
7. Inside-outside: an interrogation of coastal climate change adaptation
through the gaze of 'the lawyer'. 8. Legal geography - place, time, law and
method: the spatial and the archival in "Connection to Country". 9.
Comparative legal geography: context and place in "legal transplants". 10.
The other is us: conservation, categories and the law. 11. Ask an "expert":
phenomenology and key informant interviews as a research method in legal
geography. Part 4: Investigating the legal geographies of extractive
industries 12. Sydney's drinking water catchment: a legal geographical
analysis of coal mining and water security. 13. Lawyers in legal geography:
parliamentary submissions and coal seam gas in Australia. 14. Energising
the law: greening of fossil fuels and the rise of gendered political
subjects. 15. Exploring the production of climate change through the
nomosphere of the fossil fuel regime. Part 5: In memoriam 16. Space, scale
and jurisdiction in health service provision for drug users: the legal
geography of a supervised injecting facility. Part 6: Conclusion 17.
Conclusion: legal geography futures. Index.
Asia-Pacific approach to legal geography. Part 2: Investigating the legal
geographies of Indigenous peoples and local communities and their
environments 2. Challenges in legal geography research methodologies in
cross-cultural settings. 3. Asserting land rights through technology and
democratic expression: the effect of the Indigenous Peoples Alliance of the
Archipelago v Indonesia case. 4. Islam, legal geography and methodological
challenges in Indonesia. 5. Patent landscaping for Vanuatu: specific legal
geographic methods for Indigenous knowledge protection and promotion. 6.
Consulting the consultators: a Kaupapa M¿ori-informed approach to
uncovering Indigenous jurisdiction and shifting the research gaze. Part 3:
Investigating the legal geographies of regulation
7. Inside-outside: an interrogation of coastal climate change adaptation
through the gaze of 'the lawyer'. 8. Legal geography - place, time, law and
method: the spatial and the archival in "Connection to Country". 9.
Comparative legal geography: context and place in "legal transplants". 10.
The other is us: conservation, categories and the law. 11. Ask an "expert":
phenomenology and key informant interviews as a research method in legal
geography. Part 4: Investigating the legal geographies of extractive
industries 12. Sydney's drinking water catchment: a legal geographical
analysis of coal mining and water security. 13. Lawyers in legal geography:
parliamentary submissions and coal seam gas in Australia. 14. Energising
the law: greening of fossil fuels and the rise of gendered political
subjects. 15. Exploring the production of climate change through the
nomosphere of the fossil fuel regime. Part 5: In memoriam 16. Space, scale
and jurisdiction in health service provision for drug users: the legal
geography of a supervised injecting facility. Part 6: Conclusion 17.
Conclusion: legal geography futures. Index.
Contributors. Acknowledgements. Part 1: Introduction 1. An Australasian and
Asia-Pacific approach to legal geography. Part 2: Investigating the legal
geographies of Indigenous peoples and local communities and their
environments 2. Challenges in legal geography research methodologies in
cross-cultural settings. 3. Asserting land rights through technology and
democratic expression: the effect of the Indigenous Peoples Alliance of the
Archipelago v Indonesia case. 4. Islam, legal geography and methodological
challenges in Indonesia. 5. Patent landscaping for Vanuatu: specific legal
geographic methods for Indigenous knowledge protection and promotion. 6.
Consulting the consultators: a Kaupapa M¿ori-informed approach to
uncovering Indigenous jurisdiction and shifting the research gaze. Part 3:
Investigating the legal geographies of regulation
7. Inside-outside: an interrogation of coastal climate change adaptation
through the gaze of 'the lawyer'. 8. Legal geography - place, time, law and
method: the spatial and the archival in "Connection to Country". 9.
Comparative legal geography: context and place in "legal transplants". 10.
The other is us: conservation, categories and the law. 11. Ask an "expert":
phenomenology and key informant interviews as a research method in legal
geography. Part 4: Investigating the legal geographies of extractive
industries 12. Sydney's drinking water catchment: a legal geographical
analysis of coal mining and water security. 13. Lawyers in legal geography:
parliamentary submissions and coal seam gas in Australia. 14. Energising
the law: greening of fossil fuels and the rise of gendered political
subjects. 15. Exploring the production of climate change through the
nomosphere of the fossil fuel regime. Part 5: In memoriam 16. Space, scale
and jurisdiction in health service provision for drug users: the legal
geography of a supervised injecting facility. Part 6: Conclusion 17.
Conclusion: legal geography futures. Index.
Asia-Pacific approach to legal geography. Part 2: Investigating the legal
geographies of Indigenous peoples and local communities and their
environments 2. Challenges in legal geography research methodologies in
cross-cultural settings. 3. Asserting land rights through technology and
democratic expression: the effect of the Indigenous Peoples Alliance of the
Archipelago v Indonesia case. 4. Islam, legal geography and methodological
challenges in Indonesia. 5. Patent landscaping for Vanuatu: specific legal
geographic methods for Indigenous knowledge protection and promotion. 6.
Consulting the consultators: a Kaupapa M¿ori-informed approach to
uncovering Indigenous jurisdiction and shifting the research gaze. Part 3:
Investigating the legal geographies of regulation
7. Inside-outside: an interrogation of coastal climate change adaptation
through the gaze of 'the lawyer'. 8. Legal geography - place, time, law and
method: the spatial and the archival in "Connection to Country". 9.
Comparative legal geography: context and place in "legal transplants". 10.
The other is us: conservation, categories and the law. 11. Ask an "expert":
phenomenology and key informant interviews as a research method in legal
geography. Part 4: Investigating the legal geographies of extractive
industries 12. Sydney's drinking water catchment: a legal geographical
analysis of coal mining and water security. 13. Lawyers in legal geography:
parliamentary submissions and coal seam gas in Australia. 14. Energising
the law: greening of fossil fuels and the rise of gendered political
subjects. 15. Exploring the production of climate change through the
nomosphere of the fossil fuel regime. Part 5: In memoriam 16. Space, scale
and jurisdiction in health service provision for drug users: the legal
geography of a supervised injecting facility. Part 6: Conclusion 17.
Conclusion: legal geography futures. Index.