References
- Cooper, D., 1995. Local government legal consciousness in the shadow of juridification. Journal of law and society, 22 (4), 506–526.
- Cowan, D., 2004. Legal consciousness: some observations. Modern law review, 67, 928–958.
- Creutzfeldt, N., 2018. Ombudsmen and ADR: A comparative study of informal justice in Europe. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Engel, D., 1998. How does law matter in the constitution of legal consciousness?. In: B. Garthand and A. Sarat, eds.. How does law matter? Fundamental issues in law and society research volume 3. Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 109.
- Engel, D. and Engel, J., 2010. Tort, custom and karma: globalization and legal consciousness in Thailand. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
- Ewick, P. and Silbey, S., 1998. The common place of law: stories from everyday life. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Ewick, P. and Silbey, S., 2003. Narrating social structure: stories of resistance to legal authority. American journal of sociology, 108 (6), 1334.
- Gill, C. and Creutzfeldt, N., 2018. The ‘ombuds watchers’: collective dissent and legal protest among users of public services ombuds. Social & legal studies, 27 (3), 367–388.
- Gould, J.B. and Barclay, S., 2012. Mind the gap: the place of gap studies in sociolegal scholarship. Annual review of law and social science, 8, 323–335.
- Halliday, S., 2004. Judicial review and compliance with administrative law. Oxford: Hart Publishing.
- Halliday, S., 2019. After hegemony? The varieties of legal consciousness research. Social & legal studies, forthcoming.
- Halliday, S. and Scott, C., 2010a. A cultural analysis of administrative justice. In: M. Adler, ed.. Administrative Justice in Context. Oxford: Hart Publishing, 183–202.
- Halliday, S. and Scott, C., 2010b. Administrative justice. In: P. Cane and H.M. Kritzer, eds. The oxford handbook of empirical legal research. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 470.
- Hertogh, M., 2004. A `European’ conception of legal consciousness: rediscovering Eugen Ehrlich. Journal of law and society, 31 (4), 461.
- Hertogh, M., 2010. Through the Eyes of Bureaucrats: how Front-Line Officials Understand Administrative Justice. In: M. Adler, ed.. Administrative Justice in Context. Oxford: Hart Publishing, 203–226.
- Hertogh, M., 2011. Loyalists, legalists, cynics and outsiders: who are the critics of the justice system in the UK and the Netherlands? International journal of law in context, 7 (1), 31–46.
- Hertogh, M., 2018. Nobody’s law: legal consciousness and legal alienation in everyday life. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Kagan, R., 1995. What socio-legal scholars should do when there is too much law to study. Journal of law and society, 22 (1), 144.
- Levine, K. and Mellema, V., 2001. Strategizing the street: how law matters in the lives of women in the street-level drug economy. Law and Social Inquiry, 169.
- Maynard-Moody, S. and Musheno, M., 2003. Cops, teachers, counselors: stories from the front lines of public service. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
- Richards, Z., 2015. Unearthing bureaucratic legal consciousness: government officials’ legal identification and moral ideals. International journal of law in context, 11 (3), 1–27.
- Richards, Z., 2018. Book review: nobody’s law: legal consciousness and legal alienation in everyday life. UKAJI Blog. Available From: https://ukaji.org/2018/10/12/book-review-nobodys-law-legal-consciousness-and-legal-alienation-in-everyday-life/.
- Richards, Z., 2019. Responsive legality: the new administrative justice. Oxford: Routledge.
- Sarat, A., 1990. “The law is all over”: power, resistance and the legal consciousness of the welfare poor. Yale journal of law & the humanities, 2 (2), 343–379.
- Silbey, S., 2005. After legal consciousness. Annual review of law and social science, 1, 356.
- Silbey, S., 2018. Studying legal consciousness: building institutional theory from micro data. Droit etSociété, 3 (698), 725.
- Zacka, B., 2017. When the state meets the street: public service and moral agency. Cambridge, MS: Harvard University Press.