This series welcomes monographs, including Routledge Focus titles, and edited collections exploring how law creates and represents what living a life and being human mean. As such, the series is interested in work that probes understandings of the person, the self, personal identity, individual freedom, birth, living and dying, our relationship with the world around us, and how these are captured by the legal system and law in general.
By Sharron FitzGerald, Jane Freedman
May 27, 2024
This book addresses a gap in both contemporary theorising and empirical analysis of the European Union’s (EU) law and policy frameworks on migration, sex work and anti trafficking. Drawing on the authors’ previous research on these policies and with their practical experience of engaging with ...
Edited
By Jill Marshall
January 29, 2024
In this new and burgeoning field in legal and human rights thought, this edited collection explores, by reference to applied philosophy and case law, how the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) has developed and presented a right to personal identity, largely through interpretation of Article 8 ...