About | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline

14 Law, Culture & Human. 5 (2018)

handle is hein.journals/lculh14 and id is 1 raw text is: 








                                                                Law, Culture and the Humanities
                                                                           2018, Vol. 14(1) 5
Editorial                                                               @ The Author(s) 2017
                                                                     Reprints and permissions:
                                                             sagepub.co.ul/journalsPermissions.nav
                                                               DOI: 10.1177/1743872117751731
                                                                 journals.sagepub.com/home/Ich
                                                                              OSAGE

What  are the benefits and limits of stretching scholarly inquiry beyond the boundaries of
conventional  disciplines? What  happens  when   we  bring questions  from  outside one
domain  of inquiry into another? Can we illuminate important questions of law and policy
through exploration of humanistic texts, images, artefacts? These questions are, of course,
central to the work being done by people who  are affiliated with the Association of Law,
Culture, and the Humanities.
   They  are the kinds of questions which  animate the three contributions to the mini-
symposium,   Science, Science Fiction and International Law  that we  are publishing in
this issue in lieu of our  regular Commentary Section. As one of the contributions
describes the ambition of this mini-symposium,

   The impact of new technologies on human rights, humanitarian issues and indeed on what it
   means to be human in a technological age, suffers from a paucity of international legal attention.
   The latter has been attributed to various factors ranging from technophobia and technological
   illiteracy, inclusive of an instrumentalist view of technology, to the sense that such attention is
   the domain of science-fiction, not of international law. The article extends an invitation to pay
   attention to the attention science-fiction has given to the man-machine interaction and its
   impact on the human condition.

I trust that you will find it fascinating and provocative and exemplifying  the best of
interdisciplinary legal scholarship.

                                                                          Austin  Sarat
                                                                Amherst   College, USA

What Is HeinOnline?

HeinOnline is a subscription-based resource containing thousands of academic and legal journals from inception; complete coverage of government documents such as U.S. Statutes at Large, U.S. Code, Federal Register, Code of Federal Regulations, U.S. Reports, and much more. Documents are image-based, fully searchable PDFs with the authority of print combined with the accessibility of a user-friendly and powerful database. For more information, request a quote or trial for your organization below.



Short-term subscription options include 24 hours, 48 hours, or 1 week to HeinOnline.

Contact us for annual subscription options:

Already a HeinOnline Subscriber?

profiles profiles most