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_aTeubner, Gunther _eauthor |
245 | 0 | 0 | _aAlienating Justice: On the Surplus Value of the Twelfth Camel |
260 | _c2001. | ||
500 | _a3 | ||
520 | _aTaking Luhmann’s essay as a starting point, the author deals with some major consequences of legal autopoiesis, but shifts the focus from law’s internal self-reference to the external relations of law to society. He uses Spencer Brown’s “re-entry” to analyse the problematic relation between the legal and the extra-legal, showing a multiple alienation of law from its social origins. He redefines four topics of legal social theory: the role of legal argument in litigation, the co-evolution of law and social production regimes, the potential of the social sciences in legal reality constructs, and the reconstruction of the collective actor. | ||
786 | 0 | _nDroit et société | o 47 | 1 | 2001-01-01 | p. 75-99 | 0769-3362 | |
856 | 4 | 1 | _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-droit-et-societe1-2001-1-page-75?lang=en |
999 |
_c154919 _d154919 |