Unleashing the Force of Law: Legal Mobilization, National Security, and Basic Freedoms
By (Author) Devyani Prabhat
Palgrave Macmillan
Palgrave Macmillan
18th March 2016
1st ed. 2016
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Comparative law
Law and society, sociology of law
342.085
Hardback
225
Width 155mm, Height 235mm
530g
Basic freedoms cannot be abandoned in times of conflict, or can they Are basic freedoms routinely forsaken during times when there are national security concerns These questions present different conundrums for the legal profession, which generally values basic freedoms but is also part of the architecture of emergency legal frameworks.
Unleashing the Force of Lawuses multi-jurisdiction empirical data and draws on cause lawyering, political lawyering and Bourdieusian juridical field literature to analyze the invocation of legal norms aimed at the protection of basic freedoms in times of national security tensions. It asks three main questions about the protection of basic freedoms. First, when do lawyers mobilize for the protection of basic freedoms Second, in what kind of mobilization do they engage Third, how do the strategies they adopt relate to the outcomes they achieve
Covering the last five decades, the book focusses on the 1980s and the Noughties through an analysis of legal work for two groups of independence seekers in the 1980s, namely, Republican (mostly Catholic) separatists in Northern Ireland and Puerto Rican separatists in the US, and on post-9/11 issues concerning basic freedoms in both countries
'It is superb ... a model piece of comparative legal sociology, addressing a really important set of questions.' Steven Lukes, New York University, USA
Devyani Prabhat is a Lecturer in the School of Law at the University of Bristol, UK.