サイトマップ本館について諮問委員会お問い合わせ資料提供著作権について当サイトの内容を引用するホームページへ        

書目仏学著者データベース当サイト内
検索システム全文コレクションデジタル仏経言語レッスンリンク
 


加えサービス
書誌管理
書き出し
Uprooted Justice: Transformations of Law and Everyday Life in Northern Thailand
著者 Engel, David M. (著)
掲載誌 Wisconsin International Law Journal
巻号v.29 n.2 Summer
出版年月日2011
ページ343 - 365
出版者University of Wisconsin Law School
出版サイト https://law.wisc.edu/
出版地Madison, WI, US [麥迪遜, 威斯康辛州, 美國]
資料の種類期刊論文=Journal Article
言語英文=English
抄録Studies of law in everyday life tend to view law either as instrumental in shaping specific decisions and practices or as constitutive of the cultural categories through which humans apprehend their world and perceive law as relevant to a greater or lesser extent. This article, however, suggests that circumstances may arise in which law's role in relation to everyday life is neither instrumental nor constitutive but instead becomes one of radical dissociation.

Based on a case study of injuries over time in northern Thailand, it explains how law can become uprooted from everyday life and viewed as alien to the experiences and values of ordinary people. Two transformational episodes in the recent history of Thai society contributed to this situation. The first was the creation of the modem Thai state in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century and the extension of centralized legal and political control over the northern region and other outlying areas. During this process, the organic connection between customary and written law in northern Thailand was disrupted, and customary practices were relegated to a shadowy existence outside the framework of formal law.

The second episode was the period of dramatic social and economic change that occurred at the turn of the twenty-first century and brought with it a weakening of customary village relationships and practices. Traditional remedial practices were no longer tenable even outside the official legal system. New forms of Buddhism prompted injury victims to reject state law as an alternative, since they viewed it as inefficacious and contrary to justice as they now understood it. Consequently, law came to play neither an instrumental nor a constitutive role in the everyday lives of injury victims. After a century of state building and globalization, the dissociation of injury law from everyday life appears to be all but complete.
目次Abstract 343
Introduction 344
I. The First Transformational Episode: Creation of a Modem Nation-State 347
A. State Building under King Rama V 347
B. Impact of State Building on Law in Everyday Life in Lanna 350
II. The Second Transformational Episode: Late Twentieth Century G lobalization 357
Conclusion 363
ISSN07437951 (P)
ヒット数14
作成日2024.08.09
更新日期2024.08.09



Chrome, Firefox, Safari(Mac)での検索をお勧めします。IEではこの検索システムを表示できません。

注意:

この先は にアクセスすることになります。このデータベースが提供する全文が有料の場合は、表示することができませんのでご了承ください。

修正のご指摘

下のフォームで修正していただきます。正しい情報を入れた後、下の送信ボタンを押してください。
(管理人がご意見にすぐ対応させていただきます。)

シリアル番号
701937

検索履歴
フィールドコードに関するご説明
検索条件ブラウズ