Several authors emphasize that urban social exclusion and “dispossession of rights” submit those involved to new regulation dynamics. Faria (2002, p. 120), for example, alludes to the existence of a marginal law, consisting of a “self-produced normativity in fourth-world ghettos” that, in his view, renders the monopolistic claim to the regulation of a positive state law and formal courts problematic.
Urban Space, Social Exclusion, and “Juridicity Regimes:” an Approach based on Étienne Le Roy’s “Theory of Multijuridism” / Villas Boas Filho, Orlando; Finco, Matteo. - (2025), pp. 73-91.
Urban Space, Social Exclusion, and “Juridicity Regimes:” an Approach based on Étienne Le Roy’s “Theory of Multijuridism”
Matteo Finco
2025
Abstract
Several authors emphasize that urban social exclusion and “dispossession of rights” submit those involved to new regulation dynamics. Faria (2002, p. 120), for example, alludes to the existence of a marginal law, consisting of a “self-produced normativity in fourth-world ghettos” that, in his view, renders the monopolistic claim to the regulation of a positive state law and formal courts problematic.File allegati a questo prodotto
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