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Philosophy of Law in the Arctic

  • Dawid Bunikowski
  • , Jaakko Husa
  • , Diana Ginn
  • , Ko Hasegawa
  • , Karol Dobrzeniecki
  • , Patrick Dillon
  • , Francis Joy
  • , Rene Kuppe
  • , Leena Heinämäki
  • , Maura Hanrahan
  • , Tom Svensson
  • , Makoto Usami
  • , Agnieszka Szpak
  • , Rebecca Johnson
  • , Brendan Tobin
    • Ronin Institute for Independent Scholarship, Department of Philosophy
    • University of Helsinki - Faculty of Law
    • Hokkaido University
    • Nicolaus Copernicus University - Faculty of Law and Administration
    • University of Exeter
    • University of Lapland
    • University of Vienna - Department of Philosophy
    • University of Lapland- Arctic Centre
    • Memorial University - Environmental Policy Institute
    • University of Oslo
    • Kyoto University
    • Nicolaus Copernicus University - Department of International and European Law
    • University of Victoria - Faculty of Law
    • Griffith University - Griffith Law School

    Research output: Book/ReportBook

    Abstract

    This is rather the first book with a title "Philosophy of Law in the Arctic" in the literature. This philosophy of law is a very wide and cross-disciplinary area of research: between law, philosophy, anthropology, history, cultural ecology or environmental studies. I have no doubts that we have done such kind of philosophy in the academia so far, not using this term, but keeping up with the concept, the idea.

    The book is a result of research conducted by many members of the Sub-group of Philosophy of Law in the Arctic (the University of the Arctic). This team seems a very interdisciplinary academic group. Our cooperation bears fruit.

    The aim of the book is to define and systematise Arctic legal philosophy problems. In this book, there are five thematic parts. Each part consists of two-five short articles (we can call them also chapters or papers). These are the sixteen short articles all together. Each article consists of between six and fourteen pages. So going further, what we see in the book then is, in fact, a set of both theoretical and practical papers. The topics of these papers (chapters) are different as the authors are different while representing a wide-ranging scope of academic disciplines or specialisations. Each paper is followed by a relevant bibliography, which might be helpful for other scholars interested in the field. The seventeen writers come from such countries as Finland (4), Norway (1), Canada (3), Poland (3), Japan (2), Austria (1), Ireland (1), and England (2). Some of them have Arctic indigenous roots (3). In the end of the book, there is a very original attachment - the map of Arctic Canada.

    Original languageCanadian English
    PublisherUArctic
    Publication statusPublished - Jan. 1 2016

    Keywords

    • law
    • philosophy
    • Arctic

    Disciplines

    • Environmental Law
    • Law

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