About this Elements series
Each volume within Elements of Legistion in Context focuses on one important statute understood within the wider social, economic, political, cultural and historical contexts within which it operates. Combining doctrinal and non-doctrinal methods, it explores how that specific law has acquired meaning over time in ways shaped by a wide range of actors including – but not restricted to – judges.
Elements of Legislation in Context offer an innovative intellectual contribution that demonstrate how doctrinal and non-doctrinal critical and contextual methodologies can combine in a concrete way to illuminate and drive forward impactful research on statutory interpretation and the co-constitution of law and society. Collectively, the series aims to deepen and extend our understanding of the contextual factors that shape how legislation acquires meaning over time.
Contact the Editors
If you are interested in publishing in this series, please contact the editors at:
Kenneth A. Armstrong kaa40@cam.ac.uk
Sally Sheldon Sally.sheldon@bristol.ac.uk