Legal Pluralism and Critical Social Analysis double issue now available

The editors of our journal are pleased to announce that the journal’s issues 2 and 3 for 2022 are now available including some open access and free to access articles.

Full access to all articles is included in annual membership of the Commission on Legal Pluralism.

Articles featured in this issue:

Dik Roth. From the Editors: In Memoriam Keebet von Benda-Beckmann (1946–2022)

Marieke J. Hopman. Wait, What Are We Fighting about? – Kelsen, Ehrlich and the Reconciliation of Normative Jurisprudence and Sociology of Law

María Julia Ochoa Jiménez. 2022. Indigenous Peoples’ Normative Orders and Restitution: Latin American Private International Law and Human Rights

Germarié Viljoen. Construing the Transformed Property Paradigm of South Africa’s Water Law: New Opportunities Presented by Legal Pluralism?

Reetta Toivanen. Protecting Indigenous Identities? An Example of Cultural Expertise on Sámi Identity

Chiara Tribulato. “Uno Di Noi”: Conflict Avoidance and Resolution within the Italian Sinti Community

Rebecca Emiene Badejogbin. Judicial Discretion: Problematizing the Ascertainment and Application of Customary Law by Formal Courts and Relevant Theories (Nigeria and South Africa)

Dejene Gemechu Chala and Nega Jibat Gemede. Legal Pluralism, Gender and Justice: Women’s Rights to Property under Marriage Dissolution among the Oromo in Jimma, Ethiopia

Habeeb Abdulrauf Salihu and Hossein Gholami. Perceived Unfair Procedural Justice, Distrusted Legal Institutions and (Re)Emergence of Indigenous Restorative Justice Administration in Apata-Aje Community, Nigeria

Fulera Issaka-Toure. Law as Performance: Theatricality, Spectatorship and the Making of Law in Ancient, Medieval and Early Modern Europe

Amy R. Codling. Subversive Legal History: A Manifesto for the Future of Legal Education

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