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Abstract While legal geographers have considered the geography of legal processes, there has been less attention on how geographers are contributing to the making of law. By orientating attention to the experiences and attitudes of the geographical profession, this paper examines how specific forms of knowledge become legally useful and the ensuing ethical, legal, and disciplinary implications. We are interested in the situated nature of these productions, as scholars seek to advocate for specific communities, interests, or environments, practices that are set within and, at times, against personal or institutional priorities. We argue that geographical legal work involves transgressing established professional practices and locations of knowledge production. Through our interviews with geographers, we explore three aspects of transgression as a situated practice: the experiences of boundary crossing, the costs and benefits of entering new epistemic communities, and the lasting impacts of intervening in legal processes. In conclusion, we outline the mechanisms through which geographical legal work could be better accommodated within the work of professional geographers.
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Alex Jeffrey
University of Cambridge
Katherine Brickell
King's College London
Fiona McConnell
University of Oxford
Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers
University of Oxford
University of Cambridge
King's College London
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Jeffrey et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e6066db6db64358759a2b2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/tran.12696
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