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Socio-legal Scholarship on Southeast Asia: Themes and Directions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 May 2015

Melissa Crouch
Affiliation:
Faculty of Law, University of New South Wales, Sydney

Abstract

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Type
Preface to Special Issue
Copyright
Copyright © Faculty of Law, National University of Singapore 2014

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References

1 Academic Research Fund (Grant No. R-241-000-105-112).

2 The other audience is the socio-legal scholarship community at large. To begin this other aspect of the outreach, Chua and Harding, together with David Engel, are planning to feature select articles from the second, follow-up conference in December 2014 in a special issue of a journal with a broader socio-legal studies readership.

3 Frank Munger, Revolution Imagined: Cause Advocacy, Consumer Rights, and the Evolving Role of NGOs in Thailand (2014); John Gillespie, New Transnational Governance and the Changing Composition of Regulatory Pluralism in Southeast Asia (2013); Helena Whalen-Bridge, Conceptualisation of Pro Bono in Singapore (2014); Stacia L. Haynie & Tao L. Dumas, The Philippine Supreme Court and Regime Response (2014).

4 Agung Wardana, Alliances and Contestation in the Legal Production of Space: The Case of Bali (2014).

5 Munger has been President of the Law and Society Association (1999-2000) and former General Editor of the Law & Society Review, among other positions.

6 Galanter, Marc, “Why the Haves Come Out Ahead: Speculations on the Limits of Legal Change” (1974) 9 Law & Soc’y Rev. 95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar