Law at its limits: interdisciplinarity between law and anthropology
2015; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 47; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1080/07329113.2015.1110909
ISSN2305-9931
Autores Tópico(s)Judicial and Constitutional Studies
ResumoThe social-scientific study of law is a heterogeneous, interdisciplinary field where social scientists and legal scholars come together. Whilst sharing a keen interest in the law as social fact, both shaping and being shaped by ideas and behaviour, they do so drawing on different epistemological and methodological foundations. Especially, between legal studies and socio-cultural anthropology, there seems to be a divide in terms of research questions, epistemology and methodology. These differences led Geertz to conclude that legal anthropology ought not to fuse legal studies and anthropology to form a ‘centaur discipline’. Franz von Benda-Beckmann, trained both as lawyer and anthropologist, took issue with this dictum and saw legal anthropology in terms of ‘riding the centaur’. This article will examine different approaches addressing the relationships between the law, legal anthropology and the social-scientific study of law in light of his work.
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