3 research outputs found
Songs Upon the Rivers
The book tells the story of the trade and kin networks established by French explorers and MĂ©tis across North America. The discoveries within this book will re-establish the story of these people, the French language, and their ways of life into North American history
Introduction to Legal Studies
Introduction to Legal Studies, 5e,
is intended to provide an interdisciplinary approach to the study of law and
legal institutions for students in undergraduate university and college
programs in legal studies.
Like its four predecessors, the fifth edition is structured to reflect the diversity of
approaches and perspectives employed within Legal Studies.
The underlying theme of this collection of materials is that “law” cannot be
understood simply as a set of formal rules, processes and institutions. Rather,
law must be understood in its wider context, including the dynamic relations between
“the written law”, legal processes, and the political, cultural, social and
economic forces within society. Thus any study of law must engage its subject
reflexively and critically, rather than accept without question legal rules,
processes and institutions as natural, fixed or given. For this reason, most of
the material in this collection engages in critical reflection on the purposes,
effects and operation of law.
The text examines such topics as Canadian legal culture and institutions; theories of
law; law-making processes; the personnel of law; dispute resolution; access to
justice; citizenship and social belonging; crime, social order and the criminal
justice system; law, economy and society; and the relationship between law and
social transformation.
For courses:
Many of the articles raise complex, and sometimes difficult, arguments that students may
initially find difficult to fully appreciate. They are included to challenge
students both academically and conceptually, and to acquaint them with many new
and enduring debates in the field. The articles will encourage students to read
and think more broadly, and critically, not only about what law is, but about the
fundamental ambiguity of its roles, functions and even limits, in a wide range
of societies.
This book is usefully paired with a basic introductory text that outlines the pragmatic
forms and structures of the Canadian legal system. (Publisher summary)</p