Analytical jurisprudence often proceeds with two key assumptions:
that all law is either contained in or traceable back to an
authorizing law-state, and that states are stable and in full
control of the borders of their legal systems. What would a general
theory of law be like and do if these long-standing presumptions
were loosened? The Unsteady State aims to assess the possibilities
by enacting a relational approach to explanation of law, exploring
law's relations to the environment, security, and technology. The
account provided here offers a rich and renewed perspective on the
preconditions and continuity of legal order in systemic and
non-systemic forms, and further supports the view that the state
remains prominent yet is now less dominant in the normative lives
of norm-subjects and as an object of legal theory.
General
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