
Contextual Subjects
Family, State, and Relational Theory
Robert Leckey(Author)
University of Toronto Press
Will be published approx. on 16. February 2008
Book
Hardback
368 pages
978-0-8020-9749-1 (ISBN)
Description
Law and legal discourse both presuppose and produce legal subjects. Views on the nature of the legal subject will constantly shift, therefore, with changes in the law. Contextual Subjects argues that a new view of the legal subject has indeed emerged and that it is now embedded in the social context and relationships. This claim is developed through a contrast of Canadian family law and administrative law as it was in the mid-twentieth century and as it is today.
Robert Leckey argues that it is not only the subject that is contextual. Legal discourse and adjudication have also become more contextual, making family law and administrative law themselves contextual subjects. Leckey bolsters this argument through the use of relational theory, a rich strand of feminist political theory that advocates a contextual method and seeks to promote constructive relationships that enable relational autonomy. Developments in family law and administrative law, therefore, exemplify the contextualism called for by relational theorists. Leckey points to the importance of contextualization, but he is not uncritical of relational theory, insisting that it should articulate more forcefully its normative vision of good relationships and offer clear recommendations in contested areas.
Contextual Subjects is the most thorough and sustained application of relational theory to legal examples to appear to date. It is unique in Canadian legal scholarship for the way it pairs family law and administrative law, and within legal scholarship in English for its integration of common law and civil law.
Robert Leckey argues that it is not only the subject that is contextual. Legal discourse and adjudication have also become more contextual, making family law and administrative law themselves contextual subjects. Leckey bolsters this argument through the use of relational theory, a rich strand of feminist political theory that advocates a contextual method and seeks to promote constructive relationships that enable relational autonomy. Developments in family law and administrative law, therefore, exemplify the contextualism called for by relational theorists. Leckey points to the importance of contextualization, but he is not uncritical of relational theory, insisting that it should articulate more forcefully its normative vision of good relationships and offer clear recommendations in contested areas.
Contextual Subjects is the most thorough and sustained application of relational theory to legal examples to appear to date. It is unique in Canadian legal scholarship for the way it pairs family law and administrative law, and within legal scholarship in English for its integration of common law and civil law.
Reviews / Votes
Leckey provides perceptive and rich historical overviews of family and administrative law. There is a lot to think about and digest, and the book raises hugely interesting questions and makes a valuable contribution to legal theory and history. - Diana Majury, Canadian Journal of Law & Society, vol 25:02:10More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Toronto
Canada
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
With dust jacket
Dimensions
Height: 236 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 32 mm
Weight
700 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-8020-9749-1 (9780802097491)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Robert Leckey is an assistant professor in the Faculty of Law at McGill University.
Content
Acknowledgments1 IntroductionPART ONE: FAMILY LAW 2 Thick Subjects in the Past 3 Contextual Subjects in the Present 4 Contracting and Disputes within Relational Theory PART TWO: ADMINISTRATIVE LAW 5 Thin Subjects in the Past 6 Contextualism Emerges 7 Administration and Relational Norms 8 ConclusionNotesWorks CitedCasesLegislationIndex