Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-03T05:13:23.815Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Legal consciousness and migration: towards a research agenda

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 March 2022

Ayse Güdük
Affiliation:
Migration Law Research Group, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium
Ellen Desmet*
Affiliation:
Migration Law Research Group, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium
*
*Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

This paper reviews scholarship regarding migrants’ legal consciousness. After discussing the personal, geographic and methodological scope of the reviewed studies, the conceptualisation of legal consciousness is examined in light of evolutions in general legal consciousness studies. Thereafter, factors emerging as shaping migrants’ legal consciousness are analytically clustered at four levels: individual characteristics, relational factors, cultural dynamics, and public policies and discourse. Future research on legal consciousness could shift its gaze towards understudied migrant groups as well as places. We suggest being more explicit regarding the conceptualisation of dimensions of what is ‘legal’ and of ‘consciousness’, and adopting a pluralist approach to law. The analytical grouping of the factors impacting migrants’ legal consciousness may serve as a useful reference point for future research and facilitate a more comprehensive appraisal of the various dynamics shaping migrants’ legal consciousness.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abrego, L (2008) Legitimacy, social identity and the mobilization of law: the effects of Assembly Bill 540 on undocumented students in California. Law & Social Inquiry 33, 709734.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abrego, L (2011) Legal consciousness of undocumented Latinos: fear and stigma as barriers to claims-making for first-and 1.5-generation immigrants. Law & Society Review 45, 337369.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abrego, L (2019) Relational legal consciousness of U.S. citizenship: privilege, responsibility, guilt and love in Latino mixed-status families. Law & Society Review 53, 641670.Google Scholar
Alpes, MJ (2018) Unravelling the legal consciousness of deportation policies through women's bushfalling narratives in Anglophone Cameroon. In Hillman, F, Van Naerssen, T and Spaan, E (eds), Trajectories and Imaginaries in Migration: The Migrant Actor in Transnational Space. New York: Routledge, 7791.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barton, E (2004) The construction of legal consciousness in discourse: rule and relational orientations toward the law in a disability support group. Journal of Pragmatics 36, 603632.10.1016/S0378-2166(03)00098-5CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boittin, ML (2013) New perspectives from the oldest profession: abuse and the legal consciousness of sex workers in China. Law & Society Review 47, 245278.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chakraborty, SL et al. (2015) ‘Europe is complicated’: refugees perception of the Dublin System. Survey 55, 216.Google Scholar
Chua, LJ and Engel, DM (2019) Legal consciousness reconsidered. Annual Review of Law and Social Science 15, 335353.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cowan, D (2004) Legal consciousness: some observations. The Modern Law Review 67, 928958.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Hart, B and Besselsen, E. (2020) ‘Everything went according the rules’: female citizen sponsor's legal consciousness, intimate citizenship and family migration law. Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power 28, 3755.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Hart, B, van Rossum, W and Sportel, I (2013) Law in the everyday lives of transnational families: an introduction. Oñati Socio-Legal Series 3, 9911003.Google Scholar
Engel, D (1998) How does law matter in the constitution of legal consciousness? In Bryant, G and Sarat, A (eds), How Does Law Matter? Chicago: Northwestern University Press, 109144.Google Scholar
Engel, D and Engel, JS (2010) Tort, Custom and Karma. Globalization and Legal Consciousness in Thailand. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Ewick, P and Silbey, S (1992) Conformity, contestation, and resistance: an account of legal consciousness. New England Law Review 26, 731750.Google Scholar
Ewick, P and Silbey, S (1998) The Common Place of Law. Stories from Everyday Life. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press.10.7208/chicago/9780226212708.001.0001CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Felstiner, WLF, Abel, RL and Sarat, A (1980–1981) The emergence and transformation of disputes: naming, blaming, claiming. Law & Society Review 3, 631651.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flores, A, Escudero, K and Burciaga, E (2019) Legal-spatial legal consciousness: a legal geography framework for examining migrant illegality. Law & Policy 41, 1332.10.1111/lapo.12120CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fritsvold, ED (2009) Under the law: legal consciousness and radical environmental activism. Law & Social Inquiry 34, 799824.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Galli, C (2020) The ambivalent U.S. context of reception and the dichotomous legal consciousness of unaccompanied minors. Social Problems 67, 763781.10.1093/socpro/spz041CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gehring, A (2013) Seeking access to long-term care: legal consciousness of Dutch retirement migrants in Costa Blanca. Oñati Socio-Legal Series 3, 10231040.Google Scholar
Gleeson, S (2010) Labor rights for all? The role of undocumented immigrant status for worker claims making. Law & Social Inquiry 35, 561602.10.1111/j.1747-4469.2010.01196.xCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graca, S (2018) Portuguese culture and legal consciousness: a discussion of immigrants women's perceptions of and reactions to domestic violence. International Journal of Law in Context 14, 416436.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Halliday, S (2019) After hegemony: the varieties of legal consciousness research. Social & Legal Studies 28, 859878.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Halliday, S and Morgan, B (2013) I fought the law and the law won? Legal consciousness and the critical imagination. Current Legal Problems 66, 132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hertogh, M (2004) A ‘European’ conception of legal consciousness: rediscovering Eugen Ehrlich. Journal of Law and Society 31, 457481.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hertogh, M (2018) Nobody's Law: Legal Consciousness and Legal Alienation in Everyday Life. London: Palgrave Macmillan.10.1057/978-1-137-60397-5CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hertogh, M and Kurkchiyan, M (2016) ‘When politics come into play, law is no longer law’: images of collective legal consciousness in the UK, Poland and Bulgaria. International Journal of Law in Context 12, 404419.10.1017/S1744552316000185CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hirsh, E and Lyons, CJ (2010) Perceiving discrimination on the job: legal consciousness, workplace context, and the construction of race discrimination. Law & Society Review 44, 269297.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hull, KE (2016) Legal consciousness in marginalized groups: the case of LGBT people. Law and Social Inquiry 41, 551572.10.1111/lsi.12190CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kubal, A (2013) Migrants’ relationship with law in the host country: exploring the role of legal culture. Journal of Intercultural Studies 34, 5572.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kubal, A (2015) Legal consciousness as a form of social remittance? Studying return migrants’ everyday practices of legality in Ukraine. Migration Studies 3, 6888.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kulk, F and de Hart, B (2013) Mixed couples and Islamic law in Egypt: legal consciousness in transnational space. Oñati Socio-Legal Series 3, 10571069.Google Scholar
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 26, 169207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Menjivar, C (2006) Liminal legality: Salvadoran and Guatemalan immigrants’ lives in the United States. American Journal of Sociology 111, 9991037.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Menjivar, C and Lakhani, SM (2016) Transformative effects of immigration law: immigrants’ personal and social metamorphoses through regularization. American Journal of Sociology 121, 18181855.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Merry, SE (1990) Getting Justice and Getting Even: Legal Consciousness among Working-class Americans. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Merry, SE (2012) What is legal culture? An anthropological perspective. Journal of Comparative Law 5, 4058.Google Scholar
Miežanskienė, R (2020) Exploring tendencies in migrants’ legal consciousness research and uncovering factors for socio-legal integration. European Integration Studies 14, 2638.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Namukasa, A (2017) Law and Labour Migration Struggles: Legal Consciousness of East African Healthcare Professionals in Britain. Kassel: Kassel University Press.Google Scholar
Nielsen, LB (2000) Situating legal consciousness: experiences and attitudes of ordinary citizens about law and street harassment. Law & Society Review 34, 10551090.10.2307/3115131CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Piana, D, Schijman, E and Wagener, N (2018) Where is the law living? Juridicity and methods of research in the works of Susan Silbey. Droit et Société 100, 111.Google Scholar
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, 343379.Google Scholar
Sarat, A and Kearns, TR (1995) Law in Everyday Life. Michigan, MN: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Schwenken, H (2013) ‘The EU should talk to Germany’: transnational legal consciousness as a rights claiming tool among undocumented migrants. International Migration 51, 133143.10.1111/imig.12118CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Silbey, S (2005) After legal consciousness. Annual Review of Law and Social Science 1, 323368.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yin, RK (2018) Case Study Research and Applications: Design and Methods. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications Inc.Google Scholar