Blog: Frontiers of Socio-Legal Studies
In this week’s Frontiers of Socio-Legal Studies, Dr Joseph Patrick McAulay (CSLS, Oxford) explores the concept of the Weird and encourages us to consider how it may help us make sense of our Weird times. Read the full post here, which is published as part of the blog’s Borderlands section. If you would like to receive a summary of all of Frontiers’ latest posts, please sign up to receive our bi-monthly newsletter here.
Naomi Creutzfeldt (Kent) reviews Judith Townend and Lucy Welsh’s new book, Observing Justice: Digital Transparency, Openness and Accountability in Criminal Courts (Bristol University Press, 2023). Read the full post here, which is published as part of the blog’s A Good Read section.
Professor Linda Mulcahy talks to Dr Aino Suomi (Australian National University) about using retrospective methods. This episode is the fourth in our quantitative methods series co-produced with ANU POLIS. Listen to the full podcast here, which is part of the blog’s Talking About Methods podcast.
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"I set out to do an ethnography among Adivasi (tribes/indigenous communities) groups in the South Gujarat region of India. I wanted to understand the evolution of customary norms relating to kinship, land, and forests. Over the course of my fieldwork, I began to learn that the narratives framed around the past provide crucial groundwork towards an ethnography of the present.
-Aastha Prasad