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Informationen zum Autor Nicole Roughan is the author of Authorities: Conflicts, Cooperation and Transnational Legal Theory (2013) and is working on a new monograph, Officials (forthcoming). She is a recipient of a 2016 Rutherford Discovery Fellowship from the Royal Society of New Zealand, to undertake a major research project on Jurisprudence without Borders. Andrew Halpin has published widely in areas of legal theory broadly conceived, exploring perspectives on law from other disciplines - logic, philosophy of language, politics, and economics - and confronting the impact of novel legal phenomena arising in a global context upon general theories of law. He coedited a collection of essays, Theorising the Global Legal Order (2009). Klappentext This book presents and evaluates theoretical approaches to 'pluralist jurisprudence' and assesses the viability of theorising law extending beyond the state. Zusammenfassung In this book! core challenges facing pluralist jurisprudence are isolated and tackled from a number of contrasting yet interacting perspectives. It is a collection for both scholars and students of law! and those with an interest in legal pluralism and the ways in which we understand and evaluate relationships between state law and other legal orders. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Introduction Nicole Roughan and Andrew Halpin; 2. Do lawyers need a theory of legal pluralism? Roger Cotterrell; 3. Legal reasoning in pluralist jurisprudence: the practice of the relational imagination Maksymilian Del Mar; 4. Pluralising constitutional jurisprudence Cormac Mac Amhlaigh; 5. Law and recognition: towards a relational concept of law Ralf Michaels; 6. The many uses of law. Interactional law as a bridge between instrumentalism and law's values Sanne Taekema; 7. Why the state? Joseph Raz; 8. A genealogical perspective on pluralist jurisprudence Detlef von Daniels; 9. Two conceptions of pluralist jurisprudence Stefan Sciaraffa; 10. The gap between global law and global justice: a preliminary analysis Neil Walker; 11. Plural pluralities of law Margaret Davies; 12. Postcolonial jurisprudence and the pluralist turn: from making space to being in place Kirsten Anker; 13. Legal pluralism and the value of the rule of law Martin Krygier; 14. Conclusion: the pursuits and promises of pluralist jurisprudence Nicole Roughan and Andrew Halpin....