How is law mobilized and who has the power and authority to construct
its meaning? This important volume examines this question as well as how
law is constituted and reconfigured through social processes that frame
both its continuity and transformation over time. The volume highlights
how power is deployed under conditions of legal pluralism, exploring its
effects on livelihoods and on social institutions, including the state.
Such an approach not only demonstrates how the state, through its
various development programs and organizational structures, attempts to
control territory and people, but also relates the mechanisms of state
control to other legal modes of control and regulation at both local and
supranational levels.