Introduction - Marie-Claire Foblets, Gordon Woodman and Anthony Bradney
Part I: Law in Anthropology
Chapter 1: Teaching Refugee Law to Anthropologists - Anthony Good
Chapter 2: Teaching Anthropology of Law at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (Paris) - Yazid Ben Hounet and Mickaelle Lantin-Mallet (with contributions from Daniela Berti, Deborah Puccio-Den and Gilles Tarabout)
Chapter 3: Teaching and Studying Law and Anthropology at the LSE: Students and Staff in Conversation - Emmanuel Melissaris, Vasiliki Liaki, Grace Pollard, Alain Pottage, Ignacio Riquelme Espinosa, and Francesca Uberti
Chapter 4:Legal Anthropology as a Scientific and Applied Discipline in Russia - Natalya Novikova
Chapter 5: The Three Waves of Legal Pluralism at Warwick - Ralf Rogowski
Chapter 6: Anthropological Approaches to Law and Legal Pluralism in Africa: Teaching Experiences at the University of Bayreuth - Ulrike Wanitzek and Laura Viviane de Leeuw
Part II: Anthropology in Law
Chapter 7: Addressing Legal Anthropology in a Global World: Challenges and Perspectives in Law Schools - Lucia Bellucci
Chapter 8: Legal Anthropology in Undergraduate Legal Education in the United Kingdom - Anthony Bradney
Chapter 9: Teaching Legal Anthropology to Legal Practitioners - André Hoekema
Chapter 10: Teaching Anthropology and Sociology of Law in a German Law Faculty -Armin Höland
Chapter 11: Teaching Legal Anthropology in Various Faculties of the University of Vienna -René Kuppe
Chapter 12: Worlds Apart: Attempts to Bring Law Students Closer to an Anthropological Understanding of Customary Law -Gordon Woodman
Chapter 13: Insights for a Critical Reflection on Law -Wibo van Rossum
Chapter 14: The Place of Empirical Research in Legal Education at the Radboud University - Ashley Terlouw and Laurens Bakker
Part III: Anthropology and other (Inter)disciplinary Approaches to Law
Chapter 15: Anthropology and Transnational Legal Education: Some Ambitious Reflections Based on Humble Experience -César Arjona
Chapter 16: Teaching and Conceptualizing Conflict and Peace in the Field of Legal Anthropology - Birgit Bräuchler
Chapter 17: The Contribution of Anthropology to Teaching Comparative and International Law -Francis Snyder
Chapter 18: Teaching ‘Law, Governance and Development’: Taking Stock after 30 Years - Jan Michiel Otto
Chapter 19: How Would You Know? Prejudices Against Anthropologists Teaching Human Right - Reetta Toivanen
Prof. Dr Marie-Claire Foblets , Law & Anthropology Department, Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Germany;
Gordon R. Woodman, Emeritus Professor of Law, Birmingham Law School, University of Birmingham, UK;
Professor Anthony Bradney, School of Law,Keele University, UK;