Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Further abbreviations
- Part A
- 1 Jurisprudence, globalisation and the discipline of law: a new general jurisprudence
- 2 Analytical jurisprudence in a global context
- 3 Mapping law: Families, civilisations, cultures and traditions
- 4 Constructing conceptions of law: Beyond Hart, Tamanaha and Llewellyn
- 5 Normative jurisprudence, utilitarianism, and theories of justice
- 6 Human rights as moral, political and legal rights
- 7 Meeting the challenges to human rights: Griffin, Tasioulas and Sen
- 8 Empirical dimensions of law and justice
- Part B
- 14 Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
3 - Mapping law: Families, civilisations, cultures and traditions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Further abbreviations
- Part A
- 1 Jurisprudence, globalisation and the discipline of law: a new general jurisprudence
- 2 Analytical jurisprudence in a global context
- 3 Mapping law: Families, civilisations, cultures and traditions
- 4 Constructing conceptions of law: Beyond Hart, Tamanaha and Llewellyn
- 5 Normative jurisprudence, utilitarianism, and theories of justice
- 6 Human rights as moral, political and legal rights
- 7 Meeting the challenges to human rights: Griffin, Tasioulas and Sen
- 8 Empirical dimensions of law and justice
- Part B
- 14 Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Until you behold it yourself, it is almost impossible to believe that here, interposed between the sea and the plains of Bengal, lies an immense archipelago of islands. But that is what it is: an archipelago, stretching for almost three hundred kilometres, from the Hooghly river in West Bengal to the shores of the Meghna in Bangladesh.
The islands are the trailing threads of India's fabric, the ragged fringe of her sari, the achol that follows her, half-wetted by the sea. They number in the thousands, these islands; some are immense and some no larger than sandbars; some have lasted through recorded history while others were washed into being just a year or two ago. … The rivers' channels are spread across the land like a fine mesh-net, creating a terrain where boundaries between land and water are always mutating, always unpredictable. Some of these channels are mighty waterways, so wide across that one shore is invisible from the other; others are no more than two or three kilometres long and only a few hundred metres across. Yet each of these channels is a ‘river’ in its own right, each possessed of its own strangely evocative name. When these channels meet, it is often in clusters of four, five or even six: at these confluences, the water stretches to the far edges of the landscape and the forest dwindles into a distant rumour of land, echoing back from the horizon. In the language of the place, such a confluence is spoken of as a mohana – an oddly seductive word, wrapped in many layers of beguilement. […]
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- Information
- General JurisprudenceUnderstanding Law from a Global Perspective, pp. 63 - 87Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009