This book illuminates methodology in legal research by bringing together
interdisciplinary scholars, who employ a diverse set of methodologies,
to address a specific shared research challenge: 'the body'. The
contributors were asked a question: if you were invited to contribute to
an edited book on 'the body', where would you start and then where would
you go? The result is a self-reflective discussion of how and where
researchers engage with methodological practices. The contributors draw
on their own interdisciplinary research experiences to explore how 'the
body' might be addressed in their work, and the resources they would
deploy in order to carry out the task. This 'book within a book' is
innovative in both content and format. It provides a rare insight into
how top interdisciplinary legal scholars go about making decisions about
their research. The shared device of 'the body' allows the volume to
trace a number of rich approaches into the process of research as
practiced by these diverse scholars. In presenting thinking and research
in action, the volume offers a new, self-reflective view on the
much-addressed theme of the body, as well as taking a fresh approach to
the historically vexed problem of research methodology in legal studies.