Consciousness and Ideology 2017
DOI: 10.4324/9781315259604-10
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Situating Legal Consciousness: Experiences and Attitudes of Ordinary Citizens about Law and Street Harassment

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

4
91
0
4

Year Published

2017
2017
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
9

Relationship

0
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 73 publications
(99 citation statements)
references
References 14 publications
4
91
0
4
Order By: Relevance
“…We know little, however, about how citizens in those families develop their own legal consciousness about their juridical category. In line with previous studies on legal consciousness (Abrego , , ; Engel and Munger ; Ewick and Silbey ; Hernandez ; Hoffmann ; Merry ; Nielsen ), here I am also interested in how legal consciousness may inform people's agency.…”
Section: Immigration Law and Immigrants’ Legal Consciousnessmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…We know little, however, about how citizens in those families develop their own legal consciousness about their juridical category. In line with previous studies on legal consciousness (Abrego , , ; Engel and Munger ; Ewick and Silbey ; Hernandez ; Hoffmann ; Merry ; Nielsen ), here I am also interested in how legal consciousness may inform people's agency.…”
Section: Immigration Law and Immigrants’ Legal Consciousnessmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…That is, this case shows how the process of seizing land is not exercised as an assertion of explicit legal powers but performed as a neoliberal market transaction by reasonable individuals. While legal consciousness may vary according to a person's socioeconomic status (Ewick and Silbey ) or whether a group is, or considers itself, subordinate to the law (Nielsen ), legal consciousness in the Atlantic Yards case was shaped by how the state engaged, disengaged, and co‐constituted the public.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interdivisional misogynistic speech may be sexist speech that is in practice transformed into misogyny, or it may be misogynistic speech more in line with the ordinary definition of misogyny as the universal hatred of (all) women. For example, consider the following statements: “I hate women, they're all sluts” (recounted by a twenty‐four‐year‐old white woman, cited in Nielsen , 1055), and “Women never had voting rights [through the] history of man‐kind. And should not have it now either” (Jane , 19).…”
Section: Interdivisional and Intradivisional Misogynistic Speech As Hmentioning
confidence: 99%