1st Edition

Jurisprudence of Jurisdiction

Edited By Shaun Mcveigh Copyright 2007
    272 Pages
    by Routledge-Cavendish

    272 Pages
    by Routledge-Cavendish

    For much of the history of the western legal order, jurisdiction has been the first question of law. This book investigates the difference that jurisdiction continues to make to the ordering of normative existence. It also follows the speculation that without an account of jurisdiction, jurisprudence would be left speechless, with no power to address the conditions of attachment to legal and political order.

    The starting point of this book lies with the claim that a sharper focus can be given to normative legal ordering through questions of jurisdiction than can be through those of moral responsibility or social action. This is so because jurisdiction articulates both the potentiality of law and the conditions of its exercise. It provides the idiom of response to the fact that there is law and to the fact that law institutes, judges and addresses a form of life. From this viewpoint the contributors to this book examine the institution of human rights, the new global and national orders of sovereign power and of trade and information, the judgment and government of death and desire, and the address of colonial and post-colonial legal idioms. In doing this the contributors also provide for the elaboration of questions of jurisdiction as part of the resources and repertoires of jurisprudence.

    This book provides a point of entry to an emergent genre of writing within doctrinal, historical and critical jurisprudence that has returned to questions of jurisdiction to think again about juridical order and change. In so doing, it also points to questions that must be asked for there to be any interdisciplinary study that addresses law.

    Questions of Jurisdiction.  The Metaphysics of Jurisdiction.  Of the Founding of Law’s Jurisdiction and the Politics of Sexual Difference: The Case of Roman Law.  Guantanamo Bay: ‘Abandoned Being’ and the Constitution of Jurisdiction.  Conjuring Palestine: The Jurisdiction of Dispossession.  Jurisdiction and Nation-building: Tall Tales in Nineteenth Century Aotearoa/New Zealand.  The Suppression of State Interests in International Litigation.  Mapping Territories.  Placing Jurisdiction.  A Jurisdiction of Body and Desire: Exploring the Boundaries of Bodily Control in Prostitution Law.  Subjects of Jurisdiction: The Dying, Northern Territory, Australia, 1995–1997.  Embracing Jurisdiction: John Ford’s The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.  Jurisdiction and the Colonisation of Sublime Enjoyment.  Index

    Biography

    Shaun McVeigh is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Law, Griffith University, Australia.