Beschreibung:
Through the legal crafting of power, Street-Level Sovereignty illuminates a jurisprudence of visual representation, image, and cultural meaning that develops everyday aspects of how law works with regard to place and representation.
Street-Level Sovereignty: The Intersection of Space and Law is a collection of scholarship that considers the experience of law that is subject to social interpretation for its meaning and importance within the constitutive legal framework of race, deviance, property, and the communal investiture in health and happiness. This book examines the intersection of spatiality and law, through the construction of place, and how law is materially framed.
Chapter 1: ‘Street’ as Theory
Jan M. Broekman
Chapter 2: Sharing Conflict: Law, Justice, and the Street
Andrea Pavoni
Chapter 3: Everyday Jurisprudence in Urban Australia: Negotiating the Space of Legal Performances
Richard Mohr and Nadirsyah Hosen
Chapter 4: Sex in the Era of Consent
Margaret Mott
Chapter 5: Asphyxia: Naming Police Brutality as Street-Level Sovereignty
Andrés Fabián Henao Castro
Chapter 6: Haircuts and Power: Sovereignty and the Military
Allen Linken
Chapter 7: Images of Access to Law in the Age of Body Scanners
John Brigham
Chapter 8: Laughing Matters: Critical Race Theory and Comedy
Aaron Lorenz
Chapter 9: Ears on the Street: Coqui Frog Patrols and the Guarding of Silence in One Hawaiian Village
Marilyn Brown and Sarah Marusek
Chapter 10: Naples’ Piazza Cavour or the Playground of the Law
Patrícia Branco