Law Text Culture
Law Text Culture is a transcontinental, open access, peer-reviewed interdisciplinary journal which aims to produce fresh insights and knowledges about law and jurisprudence across three interconnected axes:
- Politics: engaging the relationship of force and resistance;
- Aesthetics: eliciting the relationship of judgment and expression;
- Ethics: exploring the relationship of self and other.
Law Text Culture publishes an annual thematic special issue, curated by guest editors selected by the editorial board. Each issue explores its theme across a range of genres, with scholarly essays and articles sitting alongside visual and literary engagements. In this way, Law Text Culture excites unique intersectional and interdisciplinary encounters with law in all its forms.
For proposals and applications information about submitting to upcoming volumes see call for submissions.
For further information about the scholarly remit of the journal, please contact the Managing Editor.
ISSN: 1322-9060.
Current Volume: Volume 27 (2024) Imagining Decolonised Law
Journal Articles
Contents & Introduction, Law Text Culture, volume 27
Rhys Aston, Kristopher Wilson, and Maria Giannacopoulos
Exhibit C273 - Pathology Report
Latoya Aroha Rule
native rage
Dominic Guerrera
Civilising the savages of Yorta Yorta country: legal metaphor, violence and the ‘tide of history’
Holly Charles
The Kangaroo and Emu Between Legal Worlds: Unsettling the Recognition of Difference
Rhys Aston and Kristopher Wilson
Colonial Goals Through Colonial Gaols: The Imperative of Indigenous Self- Centred Self-Determination for Indigenous Decarceration
Lisa N. Billington
Utopia as “No-Place”: Utopias, Colonialism and International Law
Ruth Houghton and Aoife O'Donoghue