Abstract

AbstractThis article challenges the dominant socio‐legal focus on the nation‐state by placing emphasis on its margins. Based on a review of the vibrant scholarship in the socio‐legal literature, the article sketches the features of social facts that can be found in the interstices of national legal systems and professions. Though these facts are marginalized from the perspective of these systems and professions, their role is no less real in the global arena, in whose centres they are situated. The study of these facts raises methodological questions that this article seeks to address. By attempting to shift the research focus from one object to another, in particular, the article casts light on methodological debates concerning the need to define research categories on a preliminary basis.

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