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Delimiting the Law: Postmodernism and the Politics of Law

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors argue that the law can and should be seen as multidimensional and argue that, in a sense, the law is everywhere and that it is possible to think about the law by creating links with other practices and disciplines where none previously existed.
Abstract
Whereas most modern legal theorists seek to limit their enquiries to a particular sort of law, this book questions the usefulness of such "positivist" dogmas, asserting that the law can and should be seen as multidimensional. It argues that, in a sense, the law is everywhere. In a meeting of postmodern discourse, deconstruction, feminism and legal theory, the author seeks to open new spaces, to create new ways in which we can think about the law by creating links with other practices and disciplines where none previously existed. It sets out to provide a link between conventional legal philosophy and modern movements in legal theory.

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Reconciliation and Revenge in Post-Apartheid South Africa. Rethinking Legal Pluralism and Human Rights.

TL;DR: The article concludes that the plurality of legal orders in South Africa results not from systemic relations between law and society but from multiple forms of social action seeking to alter the direction of social change in the area of justice within the context of the nation‐building project of the post‐apartheid state.
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The sovereign state v Foucault: law and disciplinary power

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Nation as Partnership: Law, “Race,” and Gender in Aotearoa New Zealand's Treaty Settlements

TL;DR: This paper used postcolonial theory to analyze the dynamic convergence of two significant international trends in Aotearoa New Zealand: the movement for reparations for historical colonial injustices, and the economic reform process known as "structural adjustment," or Reaganomics in the United States, which was intended to produce a competitive nation of individual entrepreneurs.
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Accessing Homosexuality: Truth, Evidence and the Legal Practices for Determining Refugee Status - The Case of Ioan Vraciu:

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the events surrounding a homosexual Romanian man's attempt to be recognized as a refugee in Britain and expose the corporeality and sensuality of legal practices in the form of "practices of truth".