Fr. 70.00

Luhmann and Socio-Legal Research - An Empirical Agenda for Social Systems Theory

English · Paperback / Softback

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This book discusses the designs and applications of the social systems theory (built by Niklas Luhmann, 1927-1998) in relation to empirical socio-legal studies.
This is a sociological and legal theory known for its highly complex and abstract conceptual apparatus. But how to change its scale in order to study more localised phenomena, and to deal with empirical data, such as case law, statutes, constitutions and regulation? This is the concern of a wide variety of scholars from many regions engaged in this volume. It focuses on methodological discussions and empirical examples concerning the innovations and potentials that functional and systemic approaches can bring to the study of legal phenomena (institutions building, argumentation and dispute-settlement), in the interface with economy and regulation, and with politics and public policies. It also discusses connections and contrasts with other jurisprudential approaches - for instance, with critical theory, law and economics, and traditional empirical research in law. Two decades after Luhmann's death, the 21st century has brought countless transformations in technologies and institutions. These changes, resulting in a hyper-connected, ultra-interactive world society bring operational and reflective challenges to the functional systems of law, politics and economy, to social movements and protests, and to major organisational systems, such as courts and enterprises, parliaments and public administration. Pursuing an empirical approach, this book details the variable forms by which systems construct their own structures and semantics and 'irritate' each other.
Engaging Luhmann's theoretical apparatus with empirical research in law, this book will be of interest to students and researchers in the field of socio-legal studies, the sociology of law, legal history and jurisprudence.

List of contents

  1. An Empirical Agenda for the Social Systems Theory?
  2. Lucas Fucci Amato, Marco Loschiavo Leme de Barros and Celso Fernandes Campilongo

    Part I: Theoretical bases for systemic empirical studies


  3. The Sociological Investigation of Law in Systems Theory

  4. Raffaele De Giorgi

  5. Is There a Need for a Critical Systems Theory?

  6. Lukas K. Sosoe

  7. Changing Maps: Empirical Legal Autopoiesis

  8. John Paterson and Gunther Teubner

    Part II: Analysing law through systemic approaches: the economic and regulatory interface


  9. Regulation without Interests? An Introduction to Luhmannian Empirical Mapping of System-Environment Relationships

  10. Bettina Lange

  11. Free Floating or Free Riding? Recursive Norm Building in the German Energy Transition Using the Example of the Approval of e-scooters in German Cities

  12. Cristina Besio and Margrit Seckelmann

  13. Law and Economy without 'Law and Economics'? From New Institutional Economics to Social Systems Theory

  14. Lucas Fucci Amato

    Part III: Analysing law through systemic approaches: the political interface


  15. Observing Courts: An Organisational Sociology for Socio-Legal Research

  16. Marco Antonio Loschiavo Leme de Barros

  17. Casting off from the Rock of Uncertainty: Observations on the Empirical Application of Luhmann's Sociological Theory and a Case Study on the Concept of Normative Expectations

  18. Mark Hanna

  19. Integration and Disintegration: Protest, Social Movements and Legal Interpretation

  20. Celso Fernandes Campilongo

  21. Politics, Law and Legitimacy: Reconstructing Brexit from a Systems Theory Perspective

  22. John Paterson

  23. A historical sociology of constitutions and democracy: an interview

Chris Thornhill

Summary

This book discusses the designs and applications of the social systems theory (built by Niklas Luhmann, 1927-1998) in relation to empirical socio-legal studies. This is a sociological and legal theory known for its highly complex and abstract conceptual apparatus.

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