进步和批判性法律地理学学术

IF 2.9 2区 社会学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY
Josephine Gillespie, Tayanah O'Donnell
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This claim is supported by growing numbers of publications under the rubric in leading international geographical journals and by a dramatic increase in the number of publications using the term legal geography, particularly since 2007. Australia is at the forefront of these developments. From the outset, scholars within the Institute of Australian Geographers Legal Geography Study Group, initially conceived in the 2000s, have led the field (Bartel et al., <span>2013</span>). Under strong and sustained leadership from Bartel, Robinson, Graham, Carter, ourselves, and others, this scholarship is widely regarded as being globally significant (Clark, <span>2020</span>; Techera, <span>2020</span>). At the 2021 Institute of Australian Geographers Annual Conference hosted by the University of Sydney, several legal geography sessions touched upon and referred to this blossoming research endeavour. The special section for which this paper is the editorial reflects the contributions made by Australian researchers to the continued development of legal geography scholarship. In it are works by experienced and emergent scholars presenting new research from across different areas of legal geography that showcases these developments.</p><p>Figure 1 traces a 30-year trajectory from 1973 to 2022 of legal geography publications from a Web of Science database search using the search term “legal geography”. From the early 1990s, legal geography emerged with initially tentative steps. There is a clear upward trajectory from the mid-2000s in the use of that label and a dramatic increase in the number of publications so described since then. From 2007, there has been a consistent increase in the number of publications and thereafter the average number of publications per year is 96, compared with an average of eight from 1973 to 2006. The years from 2019 to 2021 are particularly propitious for legal geography scholarship despite, or perhaps because of, the global pandemic, with an annual average of 174 publications. Clearly, legal geography research is growing rapidly and consistently.</p><p>Increasingly, scholars are turning to legal geography to shed light on some of the globe’s most pressing challenges and opportunities. Legal geography scholarship is recognised for both its ability to advance social research and its proponents’ inherent inclination to achieve impact by influencing policy and practice. We are witnessing an increase in applied, critical legal geography scholarship inflected with a progressive agenda exploring how social and environmental change is influencing law and how law is and can influence social and environmental outcomes. The co-constitutive and iterative processes inherent in legal geography scholarship are effective in balancing legal geography theory and enable such research to be applied and have impact in terms of social and environmental outcomes. The papers in this special section respond to global calls for legal geography scholars to accelerate the progressive agenda that characterises much of their critical research. In it, we flesh out how different types of legal geographical scholarship reveal how law is “co-opted” to become an agent for socially progressive causes, or how rapid social and environmental change is influencing law’s trajectories.</p><p>In these papers, too, we have revealed a dynamic and complex relationship between law and geography. As legal geographers we might profitably visualise the law/geography relationship as a non-hierarchical cyclical process where each discipline constantly, but often inconsistently, influences the other. The characteristics of this mutual dependency in the relationship between law and geography are often unforeseen and certainly under-interrogated. As both physical and human geographers, we investigate the people/place/environment nexus and are informed by varied influences and, as legal geographers, we add “law” in all its guises to our analytical lenses.</p><p>Many works in legal geography investigate specific laws and their impacts on space. These works both form, and contribute to, a general corpus in which authors explore the ways that regulatory frameworks shape landscapes by restricting and manipulating how people interact in their environs. Legal geographers also expose the reverse—how people/place and more-than-human dynamics can influence the ways in which they are regulated—wherein place-based realities influence how law is performed. This pattern of working goes to the interdependence of law and space, and the papers from this special section reveal just how complex and nuanced the relationships between them can be.</p><p>Again, Australian legal geographers lead and have growing global influence in setting new research agenda. In <i>Legal geography: Perspectives and methods</i> (O’Donnell et al., <span>2020</span>), several regional Australasian offerings have provided insights into how legal geography scholarship advances social research using different methods and methodological approaches, and have highlighted the ways in which both social and environmental changes are influencing the trajectories of law. Bartel and Carter’s (<span>2021</span>) edited collection points to the range of work undertaken in legal geography. Their extensive volume, entitled <i>Handbook on space, place and law</i>, shows the value of legal geography for contemporary crises problem-solving. Exploring how social and environmental changes influence law and asking how law can influence social and environmental outcomes are tasks core to legal geography research. At the same time, Kusiak (<span>2021</span>) has also called for legal geography scholars to accelerate the progressive agenda that characterises much of their critical research.</p><p>A clear focus on place-based dynamics also lies behind the paper by Lange and Gillespie (<span>2023</span>), who examine bushfire management strategies and their consequences for more-than-human populations. Recognising the problem that environmental and climate change will result in an increase in bush/wildfire activity across the globe, they seek to establish how well existing bushfire repression strategies—and especially “prescribed burning” policies—account for more-than-human interests when the need for biodiversity preservation and conservation is at an all-time high. Their research establishes that bushfire mitigation strategies do not adequately account for more-than-human interests in their case study area, the Blue Mountains National Park, located in the Greater Blue Mountains World Heritage Area, in New South Wales, Australia. Using qualitative software to scrutinise policy plus in-depth interviews, their analysis suggests an approach that can be adopted by policymakers in assessing more-than-human impacts. In their work, there is a neat alignment with a call to both “foreground place and decentre the human” made by Bartel and Graham (<span>2023</span>, p. 3). In this instance, legal geographers are applying their skills and insights to tackle problems associated with biodiversity crises.</p><p>Scalar injustices occur when courts use process to tighten the scope of issues in dispute among the parties. In Carr’s paper, concerns about concepts of justice, in all its permutations, link legal geography scholarship with socially progressive agendas and reveal how “dephysicalisation” Graham (<span>2021</span>) takes place through law’s formal courtroom processes.</p><p>Scale clearly is an important device for nuanced legal geography analysis, and particularly for environmental decision-making and Sherval (<span>2023</span>) draws out the importance of scalar framings in her paper about the evolution of the shale gas industry in the United Kingdom. In a deep dive analysis of community responses to shale gas development proposals in the United Kingdom focusing on the small village of Kirby Misperton in the North Yorkshire dales, Sherval reveals how concerned, active local residents have turned to protest to have their voices heard. Her work builds on a strong foundational base of similar legal geography inflected case-study research about mining and coal-seam-gas exploration in Australia (Della Bosca &amp; Gillespie, <span>2018</span>; Ey &amp; Sherval, <span>2016</span>; Sherval &amp; Graham, <span>2013</span>; Turton, <span>2015</span>, <span>2019</span>). Crucially, this research links pressing global concerns about “transition” fuels for decarbonising energy sources to localised adverse experiences of this process. Research such as Sherval’s provides the place-law example that Bartel (<span>2017</span>) has called for. Moreover, it builds on the applied policy work of Australian legal geography scholarship in the resources extraction/energy policy field, linking to cognate developments globally (see Kelly, <span>2021</span>).</p><p>Another contemporary and pressing environmental problem is tackled in Legg and Prior (<span>2023</span>) about environmental contamination litigation, particularly toxic-tort litigation. Litigation remains a key weapon in the toolkit of environmental protection, and Legg and Prior’s paper refers to toxic tort litigation involving per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substance (PFAS) contamination of two Australian Defence Force bases in Williamtown and Richmond, in New South Wales, Australia. To think through the impact of contamination on both community and the environment, they have adopted a three-prong approach to consider the multiple scales—the “plaintiff body’, “litigant property”, and the role of the state. By way of example, links between ill health and PFAS contamination are explored. Considered, too, is the role of class action, in which some individuals are included whereas others are excluded. Finally, the personal toll of being involved in litigation is observed. This work reinforces the value of a legal geography perspective to unravel the complexity of people/place/law connection. Litigation has been a continued focus for legal geography scholarship, and the papers by both Legg and Prior and Carr show that here. Articulating how litigation variously represents and frames more-than-human bodies, property and the state extends our thinking about the ways in which law-people-place collide and intertwine (see also Faria et al., <span>2020</span>; Traynor &amp; Tomczak, <span>2021</span>).</p><p>The papers in this special section give full exposure to and interrogate an exciting range of emergent and progressive ideas. We are on the path of a socially progressive research agenda, and there is more to do. Legal geography scholarship can offer insights into decolonialisation processes, give stronger voice to more-than-human concerns, and reveal how the law-people-place nexus implicates scalar framings, especially intimate, body-based experiences. Many of these concerns are associated with contemporary crises in biodiversity loss and complex climate change impacts. Moreover, unpacking the agency exercised by people, places, and the material and more-than-human all need more legal geography research. Challenges lie ahead to extend our scholarship to embrace the practice turn (Brickell et al., <span>2021</span>), uncover more about legal pluralism/s (Robinson &amp; Graham, <span>2018</span>), and enhance theorising in legal geography (Chiodelli &amp; Morpurgo, <span>2022</span>). Colleagues within our region and across the globe are calling for and making inroads into a socially progressive research agenda and Australian legal geography scholarship, such as evinced in these papers, is well-placed to lead the charge.</p>","PeriodicalId":47233,"journal":{"name":"Geographical Research","volume":"61 2","pages":"164-168"},"PeriodicalIF":2.9000,"publicationDate":"2023-04-11","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1745-5871.12595","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Progressive and critical legal geography scholarship\",\"authors\":\"Josephine Gillespie,&nbsp;Tayanah O'Donnell\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/1745-5871.12595\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>In 1992, geographer Nicholas Blomley and lawyer Joel Bakan penned a piece entitled <i>Spacing out: Towards a critical geography of law</i> in which they successfully argued for a new scholarship to interrogate the links between these ostensibly disparate disciplines (Blomley &amp; Bakan, <span>1992</span>). Blomley and Bakan’s paper may have set out the constitution of a contemporary <i>legal geography</i> scholarship and arguably marks an inflection point in an intellectual effort that began—tremulously—in the 1980s (Clark, <span>1985</span>). Described variously as an approach or subdiscipline, it has evolved significantly and, 30 years later, research is flourishing across the globe. This claim is supported by growing numbers of publications under the rubric in leading international geographical journals and by a dramatic increase in the number of publications using the term legal geography, particularly since 2007. Australia is at the forefront of these developments. From the outset, scholars within the Institute of Australian Geographers Legal Geography Study Group, initially conceived in the 2000s, have led the field (Bartel et al., <span>2013</span>). Under strong and sustained leadership from Bartel, Robinson, Graham, Carter, ourselves, and others, this scholarship is widely regarded as being globally significant (Clark, <span>2020</span>; Techera, <span>2020</span>). At the 2021 Institute of Australian Geographers Annual Conference hosted by the University of Sydney, several legal geography sessions touched upon and referred to this blossoming research endeavour. The special section for which this paper is the editorial reflects the contributions made by Australian researchers to the continued development of legal geography scholarship. In it are works by experienced and emergent scholars presenting new research from across different areas of legal geography that showcases these developments.</p><p>Figure 1 traces a 30-year trajectory from 1973 to 2022 of legal geography publications from a Web of Science database search using the search term “legal geography”. From the early 1990s, legal geography emerged with initially tentative steps. There is a clear upward trajectory from the mid-2000s in the use of that label and a dramatic increase in the number of publications so described since then. From 2007, there has been a consistent increase in the number of publications and thereafter the average number of publications per year is 96, compared with an average of eight from 1973 to 2006. The years from 2019 to 2021 are particularly propitious for legal geography scholarship despite, or perhaps because of, the global pandemic, with an annual average of 174 publications. Clearly, legal geography research is growing rapidly and consistently.</p><p>Increasingly, scholars are turning to legal geography to shed light on some of the globe’s most pressing challenges and opportunities. Legal geography scholarship is recognised for both its ability to advance social research and its proponents’ inherent inclination to achieve impact by influencing policy and practice. We are witnessing an increase in applied, critical legal geography scholarship inflected with a progressive agenda exploring how social and environmental change is influencing law and how law is and can influence social and environmental outcomes. The co-constitutive and iterative processes inherent in legal geography scholarship are effective in balancing legal geography theory and enable such research to be applied and have impact in terms of social and environmental outcomes. The papers in this special section respond to global calls for legal geography scholars to accelerate the progressive agenda that characterises much of their critical research. In it, we flesh out how different types of legal geographical scholarship reveal how law is “co-opted” to become an agent for socially progressive causes, or how rapid social and environmental change is influencing law’s trajectories.</p><p>In these papers, too, we have revealed a dynamic and complex relationship between law and geography. As legal geographers we might profitably visualise the law/geography relationship as a non-hierarchical cyclical process where each discipline constantly, but often inconsistently, influences the other. The characteristics of this mutual dependency in the relationship between law and geography are often unforeseen and certainly under-interrogated. As both physical and human geographers, we investigate the people/place/environment nexus and are informed by varied influences and, as legal geographers, we add “law” in all its guises to our analytical lenses.</p><p>Many works in legal geography investigate specific laws and their impacts on space. These works both form, and contribute to, a general corpus in which authors explore the ways that regulatory frameworks shape landscapes by restricting and manipulating how people interact in their environs. Legal geographers also expose the reverse—how people/place and more-than-human dynamics can influence the ways in which they are regulated—wherein place-based realities influence how law is performed. This pattern of working goes to the interdependence of law and space, and the papers from this special section reveal just how complex and nuanced the relationships between them can be.</p><p>Again, Australian legal geographers lead and have growing global influence in setting new research agenda. In <i>Legal geography: Perspectives and methods</i> (O’Donnell et al., <span>2020</span>), several regional Australasian offerings have provided insights into how legal geography scholarship advances social research using different methods and methodological approaches, and have highlighted the ways in which both social and environmental changes are influencing the trajectories of law. Bartel and Carter’s (<span>2021</span>) edited collection points to the range of work undertaken in legal geography. Their extensive volume, entitled <i>Handbook on space, place and law</i>, shows the value of legal geography for contemporary crises problem-solving. Exploring how social and environmental changes influence law and asking how law can influence social and environmental outcomes are tasks core to legal geography research. At the same time, Kusiak (<span>2021</span>) has also called for legal geography scholars to accelerate the progressive agenda that characterises much of their critical research.</p><p>A clear focus on place-based dynamics also lies behind the paper by Lange and Gillespie (<span>2023</span>), who examine bushfire management strategies and their consequences for more-than-human populations. Recognising the problem that environmental and climate change will result in an increase in bush/wildfire activity across the globe, they seek to establish how well existing bushfire repression strategies—and especially “prescribed burning” policies—account for more-than-human interests when the need for biodiversity preservation and conservation is at an all-time high. Their research establishes that bushfire mitigation strategies do not adequately account for more-than-human interests in their case study area, the Blue Mountains National Park, located in the Greater Blue Mountains World Heritage Area, in New South Wales, Australia. Using qualitative software to scrutinise policy plus in-depth interviews, their analysis suggests an approach that can be adopted by policymakers in assessing more-than-human impacts. In their work, there is a neat alignment with a call to both “foreground place and decentre the human” made by Bartel and Graham (<span>2023</span>, p. 3). In this instance, legal geographers are applying their skills and insights to tackle problems associated with biodiversity crises.</p><p>Scalar injustices occur when courts use process to tighten the scope of issues in dispute among the parties. In Carr’s paper, concerns about concepts of justice, in all its permutations, link legal geography scholarship with socially progressive agendas and reveal how “dephysicalisation” Graham (<span>2021</span>) takes place through law’s formal courtroom processes.</p><p>Scale clearly is an important device for nuanced legal geography analysis, and particularly for environmental decision-making and Sherval (<span>2023</span>) draws out the importance of scalar framings in her paper about the evolution of the shale gas industry in the United Kingdom. In a deep dive analysis of community responses to shale gas development proposals in the United Kingdom focusing on the small village of Kirby Misperton in the North Yorkshire dales, Sherval reveals how concerned, active local residents have turned to protest to have their voices heard. Her work builds on a strong foundational base of similar legal geography inflected case-study research about mining and coal-seam-gas exploration in Australia (Della Bosca &amp; Gillespie, <span>2018</span>; Ey &amp; Sherval, <span>2016</span>; Sherval &amp; Graham, <span>2013</span>; Turton, <span>2015</span>, <span>2019</span>). Crucially, this research links pressing global concerns about “transition” fuels for decarbonising energy sources to localised adverse experiences of this process. Research such as Sherval’s provides the place-law example that Bartel (<span>2017</span>) has called for. Moreover, it builds on the applied policy work of Australian legal geography scholarship in the resources extraction/energy policy field, linking to cognate developments globally (see Kelly, <span>2021</span>).</p><p>Another contemporary and pressing environmental problem is tackled in Legg and Prior (<span>2023</span>) about environmental contamination litigation, particularly toxic-tort litigation. Litigation remains a key weapon in the toolkit of environmental protection, and Legg and Prior’s paper refers to toxic tort litigation involving per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substance (PFAS) contamination of two Australian Defence Force bases in Williamtown and Richmond, in New South Wales, Australia. To think through the impact of contamination on both community and the environment, they have adopted a three-prong approach to consider the multiple scales—the “plaintiff body’, “litigant property”, and the role of the state. By way of example, links between ill health and PFAS contamination are explored. Considered, too, is the role of class action, in which some individuals are included whereas others are excluded. Finally, the personal toll of being involved in litigation is observed. This work reinforces the value of a legal geography perspective to unravel the complexity of people/place/law connection. Litigation has been a continued focus for legal geography scholarship, and the papers by both Legg and Prior and Carr show that here. Articulating how litigation variously represents and frames more-than-human bodies, property and the state extends our thinking about the ways in which law-people-place collide and intertwine (see also Faria et al., <span>2020</span>; Traynor &amp; Tomczak, <span>2021</span>).</p><p>The papers in this special section give full exposure to and interrogate an exciting range of emergent and progressive ideas. We are on the path of a socially progressive research agenda, and there is more to do. Legal geography scholarship can offer insights into decolonialisation processes, give stronger voice to more-than-human concerns, and reveal how the law-people-place nexus implicates scalar framings, especially intimate, body-based experiences. Many of these concerns are associated with contemporary crises in biodiversity loss and complex climate change impacts. Moreover, unpacking the agency exercised by people, places, and the material and more-than-human all need more legal geography research. Challenges lie ahead to extend our scholarship to embrace the practice turn (Brickell et al., <span>2021</span>), uncover more about legal pluralism/s (Robinson &amp; Graham, <span>2018</span>), and enhance theorising in legal geography (Chiodelli &amp; Morpurgo, <span>2022</span>). Colleagues within our region and across the globe are calling for and making inroads into a socially progressive research agenda and Australian legal geography scholarship, such as evinced in these papers, is well-placed to lead the charge.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":47233,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Geographical Research\",\"volume\":\"61 2\",\"pages\":\"164-168\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":2.9000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-04-11\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1745-5871.12595\",\"citationCount\":\"1\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Geographical Research\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"90\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1745-5871.12595\",\"RegionNum\":2,\"RegionCategory\":\"社会学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q1\",\"JCRName\":\"GEOGRAPHY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Geographical Research","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1745-5871.12595","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"GEOGRAPHY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1

摘要

1992年,地理学家尼古拉斯·布洛姆利(Nicholas Blomley)和律师乔尔·巴肯(Joel Bakan)写了一篇题为《间隔:走向法律的批判地理学》的文章,在这篇文章中,他们成功地争取到了一种新的学术研究,来探究这些表面上完全不同的学科之间的联系。Bakan, 1992)。Blomley和Bakan的论文可能已经确立了当代法律地理学术的构成,并且可以说标志着20世纪80年代开始的智力努力的拐点(Clark, 1985)。它以不同的方式被描述为一种方法或分支学科,它已经发生了重大变化,30年后,研究在全球范围内蓬勃发展。这一主张得到了越来越多的出版物在主要国际地理期刊标题下的支持,特别是自2007年以来,使用“法律地理学”一词的出版物数量急剧增加。澳大利亚处于这些事态发展的前沿。从一开始,澳大利亚地理学家研究所法律地理研究小组的学者们就领导了这一领域(巴特尔等人,2013年)。在巴特尔、罗宾逊、格雷厄姆、卡特、我们自己和其他人强有力和持续的领导下,这一奖学金被广泛认为具有全球意义(Clark, 2020;Techera, 2020)。在悉尼大学主办的2021年澳大利亚地理学家协会年会上,一些法律地理学会议涉及并提到了这一蓬勃发展的研究努力。本文的社论部分反映了澳大利亚研究人员对法律地理学术的持续发展所作的贡献。在它是由经验丰富的和新兴的学者提出了新的研究跨越法律地理的不同领域,展示了这些发展的作品。图1追踪了从1973年到2022年法律地理出版物的30年轨迹,这些出版物是使用“法律地理”搜索词从Web of Science数据库中搜索到的。从20世纪90年代初开始,法律地理学出现了初步的试探性步骤。从2000年代中期开始,这一标签的使用出现了明显的上升趋势,自那时以来,这样描述的出版物数量急剧增加。从2007年开始,出版物数量持续增加,此后每年平均出版物数量为96份,而1973年至2006年的平均出版物数量为8份。2019年至2021年对法律地理学术来说尤其有利,尽管全球大流行,或者可能正因为如此,每年平均有174篇论文发表。显然,法律地理学研究正在快速而持续地发展。学者们越来越多地转向法律地理学,以阐明全球一些最紧迫的挑战和机遇。法律地理研究因其推动社会研究的能力和其支持者通过影响政策和实践来实现影响的内在倾向而得到认可。我们正在目睹应用的、批判性的法律地理学术的增加,这些学术受到进步议程的影响,探索社会和环境变化如何影响法律,以及法律是如何影响社会和环境结果的。法律地理学术固有的共同构成和迭代过程有效地平衡了法律地理理论,并使此类研究得以应用,并在社会和环境结果方面产生影响。这个特殊部分的论文回应了法律地理学学者加速进步议程的全球呼吁,这是他们批判性研究的特点。在这本书中,我们详细阐述了不同类型的法律地理研究如何揭示法律是如何被“增选”成为社会进步事业的代理人,或者快速的社会和环境变化是如何影响法律的轨迹的。在这些论文中,我们也揭示了法律与地理之间动态而复杂的关系。作为法律地理学家,我们可以将法律/地理关系可视化为一个非等级循环过程,其中每个学科不断(但通常不一致)影响对方,从而获利。法律和地理之间这种相互依赖关系的特点往往是不可预见的,当然也没有受到充分的质疑。作为自然地理学家和人文地理学家,我们调查人/地点/环境的关系,并受到各种影响的影响,作为法律地理学家,我们将所有伪装的“法律”添加到我们的分析镜头中。法律地理学的许多著作研究具体的法律及其对空间的影响。这些作品都形成,并有助于,一个一般的语料库中,作者探索监管框架塑造景观的方式,通过限制和操纵人们如何在他们的环境中互动。 法律地理学家还揭示了相反的情况——人/地点和超越人类的动态如何影响他们被监管的方式——其中基于地点的现实影响法律的执行方式。这种工作模式涉及到法律和空间的相互依存,这个特殊部分的论文揭示了它们之间的关系是多么复杂和微妙。再一次,澳大利亚法律地理学家在制定新的研究议程方面处于领先地位,并具有越来越大的全球影响力。在法律地理学:观点和方法(O 'Donnell等人,2020)中,澳大利亚的几个区域产品提供了法律地理学奖学金如何使用不同的方法和方法论方法推进社会研究的见解,并强调了社会和环境变化影响法律轨迹的方式。巴特尔和卡特(2021)编辑的文集指出了在法律地理学领域开展的一系列工作。他们广泛的卷,题为手册的空间,地点和法律,显示了法律地理学对当代危机解决的价值。探索社会和环境变化如何影响法律,并询问法律如何影响社会和环境结果是法律地理学研究的核心任务。与此同时,Kusiak(2021)也呼吁法律地理学学者加快进步议程,这是他们批判性研究的特点。Lange和Gillespie(2023)的论文也明确关注基于地点的动态,他们研究了森林火灾管理策略及其对非人类种群的影响。认识到环境和气候变化将导致全球丛林/野火活动增加的问题,他们试图确定现有的丛林火灾抑制策略,特别是“规定燃烧”政策,在生物多样性保护和保护的需求达到历史最高水平时,如何更好地考虑到人类利益。他们的研究表明,在他们的案例研究区域,位于澳大利亚新南威尔士州大蓝山世界遗产区的蓝山国家公园,森林大火缓解策略并没有充分考虑到人类以外的利益。通过使用定性软件来审查政策,再加上深度访谈,他们的分析提出了一种政策制定者在评估人类以外的影响时可以采用的方法。在他们的工作中,巴特尔和格雷厄姆(2023,第3页)对“前景和分散人类”的呼吁有一个整齐的一致性。在这种情况下,法律地理学家正在运用他们的技能和见解来解决与生物多样性危机相关的问题。当法院使用程序来收紧当事人之间争议问题的范围时,就会出现标量的不公正。在卡尔的论文中,对所有排列中的正义概念的关注,将法律地理学研究与社会进步议程联系起来,并揭示了格雷厄姆(2021)如何通过法律的正式法庭程序实现“去物质化”。尺度显然是微妙的法律地理分析的重要手段,特别是环境决策,Sherval(2023)在她关于英国页岩气行业演变的论文中指出了标量框架的重要性。Sherval深入分析了英国社区对页岩气开发提案的反应,重点是北约克郡山谷中的Kirby Misperton小村庄,揭示了当地居民如何关注,积极地转向抗议,让他们的声音被听到。她的工作建立在类似的法律地理学案例研究的坚实基础上,这些案例研究涉及澳大利亚的采矿和煤层气勘探(Della Bosca &Gillespie, 2018;莎莉,Sherval, 2016;Sherval,格雷厄姆,2013;Turton, 2015, 2019)。至关重要的是,这项研究将全球对用于脱碳能源的“过渡”燃料的紧迫担忧与这一过程的局部不利经历联系起来。像Sherval这样的研究提供了Bartel(2017)所呼吁的地方法例子。此外,它建立在澳大利亚法律地理学者在资源开采/能源政策领域的应用政策工作的基础上,与全球的同源发展相联系(见Kelly, 2021)。另一个当代和紧迫的环境问题是解决在Legg和Prior(2023)关于环境污染诉讼,特别是有毒侵权诉讼。诉讼仍然是环境保护工具包中的关键武器,Legg和Prior的论文提到了涉及位于澳大利亚新南威尔士州威廉敦和里士满的两个澳大利亚国防军基地的全氟烷基和多氟烷基物质(PFAS)污染的有毒侵权诉讼。 为了考虑污染对社区和环境的影响,他们采用了三管齐下的方法来考虑多个尺度——“原告主体”、“诉讼财产”和国家的作用。通过举例,探讨了健康不良与全氟辛烷磺酸污染之间的联系。还考虑了集体诉讼的作用,其中一些人被包括在内,而另一些人被排除在外。最后,观察了卷入诉讼的个人损失。这项工作加强了法律地理学视角的价值,以揭示人/地点/法律联系的复杂性。诉讼一直是法律地理学学者关注的焦点,莱格、普赖尔和卡尔的论文在这里表明了这一点。阐明诉讼如何以各种方式代表和框架超越人类的身体,财产和国家扩展了我们对法律-人-地碰撞和交织方式的思考(另见Faria等人,2020;其次,Tomczak, 2021)。这个特殊部分的论文充分展示和询问了一系列令人兴奋的新兴和进步思想。我们正走在社会进步研究议程的道路上,还有更多的工作要做。法律地理学研究可以为非殖民化进程提供见解,为超越人类的关切提供更强有力的声音,并揭示法律-人-地关系如何隐含标量框架,特别是亲密的、基于身体的体验。其中许多关切与当代生物多样性丧失危机和复杂的气候变化影响有关。此外,对人、地、物以及超越人的作用进行剖析,都需要更多的法律地理学研究。挑战在于扩展我们的学术以拥抱实践转向(Brickell等人,2021),揭示更多关于法律多元化的问题(Robinson &Graham, 2018),并加强法律地理学的理论化(Chiodelli &Morpurgo, 2022)。我们地区和全球的同事都在呼吁并推动社会进步的研究议程,而澳大利亚法律地理学术,如这些论文所证明的那样,很有可能引领这一潮流。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Progressive and critical legal geography scholarship

Progressive and critical legal geography scholarship

In 1992, geographer Nicholas Blomley and lawyer Joel Bakan penned a piece entitled Spacing out: Towards a critical geography of law in which they successfully argued for a new scholarship to interrogate the links between these ostensibly disparate disciplines (Blomley & Bakan, 1992). Blomley and Bakan’s paper may have set out the constitution of a contemporary legal geography scholarship and arguably marks an inflection point in an intellectual effort that began—tremulously—in the 1980s (Clark, 1985). Described variously as an approach or subdiscipline, it has evolved significantly and, 30 years later, research is flourishing across the globe. This claim is supported by growing numbers of publications under the rubric in leading international geographical journals and by a dramatic increase in the number of publications using the term legal geography, particularly since 2007. Australia is at the forefront of these developments. From the outset, scholars within the Institute of Australian Geographers Legal Geography Study Group, initially conceived in the 2000s, have led the field (Bartel et al., 2013). Under strong and sustained leadership from Bartel, Robinson, Graham, Carter, ourselves, and others, this scholarship is widely regarded as being globally significant (Clark, 2020; Techera, 2020). At the 2021 Institute of Australian Geographers Annual Conference hosted by the University of Sydney, several legal geography sessions touched upon and referred to this blossoming research endeavour. The special section for which this paper is the editorial reflects the contributions made by Australian researchers to the continued development of legal geography scholarship. In it are works by experienced and emergent scholars presenting new research from across different areas of legal geography that showcases these developments.

Figure 1 traces a 30-year trajectory from 1973 to 2022 of legal geography publications from a Web of Science database search using the search term “legal geography”. From the early 1990s, legal geography emerged with initially tentative steps. There is a clear upward trajectory from the mid-2000s in the use of that label and a dramatic increase in the number of publications so described since then. From 2007, there has been a consistent increase in the number of publications and thereafter the average number of publications per year is 96, compared with an average of eight from 1973 to 2006. The years from 2019 to 2021 are particularly propitious for legal geography scholarship despite, or perhaps because of, the global pandemic, with an annual average of 174 publications. Clearly, legal geography research is growing rapidly and consistently.

Increasingly, scholars are turning to legal geography to shed light on some of the globe’s most pressing challenges and opportunities. Legal geography scholarship is recognised for both its ability to advance social research and its proponents’ inherent inclination to achieve impact by influencing policy and practice. We are witnessing an increase in applied, critical legal geography scholarship inflected with a progressive agenda exploring how social and environmental change is influencing law and how law is and can influence social and environmental outcomes. The co-constitutive and iterative processes inherent in legal geography scholarship are effective in balancing legal geography theory and enable such research to be applied and have impact in terms of social and environmental outcomes. The papers in this special section respond to global calls for legal geography scholars to accelerate the progressive agenda that characterises much of their critical research. In it, we flesh out how different types of legal geographical scholarship reveal how law is “co-opted” to become an agent for socially progressive causes, or how rapid social and environmental change is influencing law’s trajectories.

In these papers, too, we have revealed a dynamic and complex relationship between law and geography. As legal geographers we might profitably visualise the law/geography relationship as a non-hierarchical cyclical process where each discipline constantly, but often inconsistently, influences the other. The characteristics of this mutual dependency in the relationship between law and geography are often unforeseen and certainly under-interrogated. As both physical and human geographers, we investigate the people/place/environment nexus and are informed by varied influences and, as legal geographers, we add “law” in all its guises to our analytical lenses.

Many works in legal geography investigate specific laws and their impacts on space. These works both form, and contribute to, a general corpus in which authors explore the ways that regulatory frameworks shape landscapes by restricting and manipulating how people interact in their environs. Legal geographers also expose the reverse—how people/place and more-than-human dynamics can influence the ways in which they are regulated—wherein place-based realities influence how law is performed. This pattern of working goes to the interdependence of law and space, and the papers from this special section reveal just how complex and nuanced the relationships between them can be.

Again, Australian legal geographers lead and have growing global influence in setting new research agenda. In Legal geography: Perspectives and methods (O’Donnell et al., 2020), several regional Australasian offerings have provided insights into how legal geography scholarship advances social research using different methods and methodological approaches, and have highlighted the ways in which both social and environmental changes are influencing the trajectories of law. Bartel and Carter’s (2021) edited collection points to the range of work undertaken in legal geography. Their extensive volume, entitled Handbook on space, place and law, shows the value of legal geography for contemporary crises problem-solving. Exploring how social and environmental changes influence law and asking how law can influence social and environmental outcomes are tasks core to legal geography research. At the same time, Kusiak (2021) has also called for legal geography scholars to accelerate the progressive agenda that characterises much of their critical research.

A clear focus on place-based dynamics also lies behind the paper by Lange and Gillespie (2023), who examine bushfire management strategies and their consequences for more-than-human populations. Recognising the problem that environmental and climate change will result in an increase in bush/wildfire activity across the globe, they seek to establish how well existing bushfire repression strategies—and especially “prescribed burning” policies—account for more-than-human interests when the need for biodiversity preservation and conservation is at an all-time high. Their research establishes that bushfire mitigation strategies do not adequately account for more-than-human interests in their case study area, the Blue Mountains National Park, located in the Greater Blue Mountains World Heritage Area, in New South Wales, Australia. Using qualitative software to scrutinise policy plus in-depth interviews, their analysis suggests an approach that can be adopted by policymakers in assessing more-than-human impacts. In their work, there is a neat alignment with a call to both “foreground place and decentre the human” made by Bartel and Graham (2023, p. 3). In this instance, legal geographers are applying their skills and insights to tackle problems associated with biodiversity crises.

Scalar injustices occur when courts use process to tighten the scope of issues in dispute among the parties. In Carr’s paper, concerns about concepts of justice, in all its permutations, link legal geography scholarship with socially progressive agendas and reveal how “dephysicalisation” Graham (2021) takes place through law’s formal courtroom processes.

Scale clearly is an important device for nuanced legal geography analysis, and particularly for environmental decision-making and Sherval (2023) draws out the importance of scalar framings in her paper about the evolution of the shale gas industry in the United Kingdom. In a deep dive analysis of community responses to shale gas development proposals in the United Kingdom focusing on the small village of Kirby Misperton in the North Yorkshire dales, Sherval reveals how concerned, active local residents have turned to protest to have their voices heard. Her work builds on a strong foundational base of similar legal geography inflected case-study research about mining and coal-seam-gas exploration in Australia (Della Bosca & Gillespie, 2018; Ey & Sherval, 2016; Sherval & Graham, 2013; Turton, 2015, 2019). Crucially, this research links pressing global concerns about “transition” fuels for decarbonising energy sources to localised adverse experiences of this process. Research such as Sherval’s provides the place-law example that Bartel (2017) has called for. Moreover, it builds on the applied policy work of Australian legal geography scholarship in the resources extraction/energy policy field, linking to cognate developments globally (see Kelly, 2021).

Another contemporary and pressing environmental problem is tackled in Legg and Prior (2023) about environmental contamination litigation, particularly toxic-tort litigation. Litigation remains a key weapon in the toolkit of environmental protection, and Legg and Prior’s paper refers to toxic tort litigation involving per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substance (PFAS) contamination of two Australian Defence Force bases in Williamtown and Richmond, in New South Wales, Australia. To think through the impact of contamination on both community and the environment, they have adopted a three-prong approach to consider the multiple scales—the “plaintiff body’, “litigant property”, and the role of the state. By way of example, links between ill health and PFAS contamination are explored. Considered, too, is the role of class action, in which some individuals are included whereas others are excluded. Finally, the personal toll of being involved in litigation is observed. This work reinforces the value of a legal geography perspective to unravel the complexity of people/place/law connection. Litigation has been a continued focus for legal geography scholarship, and the papers by both Legg and Prior and Carr show that here. Articulating how litigation variously represents and frames more-than-human bodies, property and the state extends our thinking about the ways in which law-people-place collide and intertwine (see also Faria et al., 2020; Traynor & Tomczak, 2021).

The papers in this special section give full exposure to and interrogate an exciting range of emergent and progressive ideas. We are on the path of a socially progressive research agenda, and there is more to do. Legal geography scholarship can offer insights into decolonialisation processes, give stronger voice to more-than-human concerns, and reveal how the law-people-place nexus implicates scalar framings, especially intimate, body-based experiences. Many of these concerns are associated with contemporary crises in biodiversity loss and complex climate change impacts. Moreover, unpacking the agency exercised by people, places, and the material and more-than-human all need more legal geography research. Challenges lie ahead to extend our scholarship to embrace the practice turn (Brickell et al., 2021), uncover more about legal pluralism/s (Robinson & Graham, 2018), and enhance theorising in legal geography (Chiodelli & Morpurgo, 2022). Colleagues within our region and across the globe are calling for and making inroads into a socially progressive research agenda and Australian legal geography scholarship, such as evinced in these papers, is well-placed to lead the charge.

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