1st Edition
Hybridity: Law, Culture and Development
1. Rosa Freedman and Nicolas Lemay-Hébert: Introduction Part I Localising hybridity 2. Philipp Lottholz: Nothing more than a conceptual lens? Situating hybridity in social inquiry 3. Rosa Freedman and Phillip Lottholz: Peace as a Hybrid Human Right: A new way to realise human rights, or entrenching their systematic failue 4. Fiona de Londras: (Counter-) Terrorism and hybridity 5. Ruth Alice Houghton: Hybrid Processes for Hybrid Outcomes: NGO Participation at the United Nations Human Rights Council Part II Hybridity in history and culture 6. Gareth Sears: From Romanised subject to sophisticated code-switcher: the formation of thought on hybridity and the spread of Roman culture 7. Philip Myers: Hybridity and the Ancient Western Mediterranean 8. Eric Heinze: Legal Hybridity in Shakespeare: Revisiting the Post-Colonial in The Tempest and Cymbeline 9. Mark Kirkman: Hybridity and the Ottoman: What Can We Learn From the Ottoman Statebuilding Framework? Part II New developments in hybridity and legal pluralism 10. Louisa Riches: Legal and Normative Pluralism, Hybridity and Human Rights: the Universal Periodic Review 11. Jon Yorke: Deconstructing a Sovereign Right: The Hybridization of the Anti-Death Penalty Discourse in Europe 12. Ben Warwick: Describing a Rights Realisation Hybrid: The Example of Socio-Economic Rights 13. Kim Barker and Christina Baghdady: From Hybrid to Cybrid? The Formation and Regulation of Online ‘Hybrid’ Identities Part III Hybrid approaches to peace and justice 14. Danielle Beswick: Hybrid approaches to peace and justice: The case of post-genocide Rwanda 15. Paul Jackson: Hybridity or coexistence? The politics of legal pluralism in the West African countryside 16. Sam Fowles: Hybridity as a tool for deconstruction: The case of "Child witches" 17. George Wilson: The View from law and new governance: A critical appraisal of hybridity in peace and development studies 18. Gëzim Visoka: After Hybridity?
Biography
Nicolas Lemay-Hébert is based in the International Development Department, University of Birmingham, UK, and Rosa Freedman in the Law Department, at the University of Reading, UK.






