Contents
- Introduction: Social and Political Transformation within, against, and beyond the Law 
- 1Reckoning with Transformative Constitutionalism: Land Reform, Expropriation Without Compensation, and the Iconic Indexicality of Post-apartheid South Africa 
- 2Beyond Here Lies Somethin’: Juristocratic Reckonings in Two Narratives of Legalities 
- 3After Constitutionalism: Current Pathways of Legal Domination 
- 4Re-presenting Rights: Food Sovereignty and the Struggle for Postliberal Democratic Governance 
- 5Translocal Dilemmas: Social Mobilization and Justice-Seeking beyond the Boundaries of Law 
- 6The Enduring Logic of Mercy: Humanitarianism and the Eclipse of Human Rights 
- 7Law and the Afterlives of Utopia: Reckoning with Pasts and Futures in Berlin’s Housing Movement 
- 8Plurinational Juristocracy and Rights from Below at Bolivia’s Gas Frontier 
- 9Law-Washing the Transitional State: The Practice of Property Restitution in Postwar Kosovo 
- 10After Judicialization? Law, Authoritarian Regression, and the Defense of Indigenous Life-Worlds in Guatemala 
- 11“A Dead Child Is Better than a Missing One”: Religiosity, Technology, and Aspirations for Justice beyond Law 
