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  2. Legal culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_culture

    Lawrence M. Friedman's definition of legal culture is that it is "the network of values and attitudes relating to law, which determines when and why and where people turn to law or government, or turn away." [2] Legal cultures can be examined by reference to fundamentally different legal systems.

  3. Legal consciousness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_consciousness

    Legal consciousness is a collection of understood and/or imagined to have understood, legal awareness of ideas, views, feelings and traditions imbibed through legal socialization; which reflects as legal culture among given individual, or a group, or a given society at large.

  4. Legal tradition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_tradition

    A legal tradition or legal family is a grouping of laws or legal systems based on shared features or historical relationships. [1] Common examples include the common law tradition and civil law tradition. Many other legal traditions have also been recognized. The concepts of legal system, legal tradition, and legal culture are closely related.

  5. Legal anthropology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_anthropology

    Legal Anthropology provides a definition of law which differs from that found within modern legal systems. Hoebel (1954) offered the following definition of law: "A social norm is legal if its neglect or infraction is regularly met, in threat or in fact, by the application of physical force by an individual or group possessing the socially ...

  6. Law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law

    The law shapes politics, economics, history and society in various ways and also serves as a mediator of relations between people. Legal systems vary between jurisdictions, with their differences analysed in comparative law. In civil law jurisdictions, a legislature or other central body codifies and consolidates the law.

  7. Sociology of law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sociology_of_law

    Lawrence M. Friedman is among socio-legal scholars who introduced the idea of legal culture into the sociology of law. For Friedman, legal culture "refers to public knowledge of and attitudes and behaviour patterns toward the legal system". [114] It can also consist of "bodies of custom organically related to the culture as a whole. [115]

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  9. Legal socialization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_socialization

    The "legal acculturation of the subject" would thus occur thanks to the transmission by school (or other channels conveying of the common culture), integrating the historical experience assimilated by national culture and fundamental concepts and values of the national legal heritage (in particular regarding the state, the citizen, law or ...