17 research outputs found
Enhancing Participatory Strategies With Designerly Ways for Sociolegal Impact: Lessons From Research Aimed at Making Hate Crime Visible
This paper draws the attention of impact-curious sociolegal researchers to the potential of participatory research strategies; and proposes that the effectiveness of those strategies can be enhanced by the introduction of âdesignerly waysâ. It explores and evidences this proposition through the multi-country Facing All the Facts project which aimed to support and accelerate the process of making hate crime conceptually and empirically visible in Europe. The paper concludes that by pursuing the designerly strategy of making experiences, perceptions and expectations around hate crime reporting and recording visible and tangible in artefacts (formal graphics and collaborative prototypes), the project activities generated structured-yet-free spaces in which publics/stakeholders could more effectively participate in practical, critical and imaginative discussion about how things are, and how they might be; and that this has improved the relevance and rigour of the research, and its ability to generate meaningful change (âimpactâ)
Materials-based gaze: An interview with Zoe Laughlin
An interview with Zoe Laughlin, co-founder/director of the Institute of Making, exploring the potential of materials to 'fire imagination' and 'advance conceptualisation'. For more information see econosociolegal.wordpress.com/2016/08/10/exploring-the-potential-of-materials-to-fire-imagination-and-advance-conceptualisation
Materials-based gaze: An interview with Zoe Laughlin
An interview with Zoe Laughlin, co-founder/director of the Institute of Making, exploring the potential of materials to 'fire imagination' and 'advance conceptualisation'. For more information see econosociolegal.wordpress.com/2016/08/10/exploring-the-potential-of-materials-to-fire-imagination-and-advance-conceptualisation
Approaching the econo-socio-legal
This article offers a systematic introduction to a body of historical and contemporary research that is distinctive in its commitment to the observations that the economy and the law are mutually constitutive, and that both are in turn mutually constitutive of wider social life, including that part of social life relating to how we think and communicate about the econo-socio-legal. The aim is to offer a framework for approaching econo-socio-legal thinking and practice from the past, present, and future