Abstract
t This is thefinal version of the third working paper in a series giving details of the research methods and results of the ESRC-funded, Access to Justice in Rural Britain Project (Grant EOO 232 054). A version revisedfor geographers will appear in (1986) 10:3 Progress in Geography 371 under the title Human Geography and Law: A Case of Separate Development in Social Science. The paper was presented at the 1985 European Conference of Critical Legal Studies on New Frontiers of Legality in Coimbra, Portugal, and at seminars in Sheffield, Birmingham and Cardiff. Subject to the usual disclaimer concerning responsibility, we wish to thank these audiences for their helpful comments and suggestions.
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