Broadly, the study of the relations between law and space. This may include: the regulation of land use through planning and property; the regulation of personal movement and migration; theorizing the relationship between formal and informal means of regulation and people and place; markets; governance and social justice issues; and the movement and political expression of minority groups and interests. All of these are regulated in some way through the mechanism and institution of the law. See N. Blomley, D. Delaney, R. T. Ford (2001) for a reader on legal geography. Martin et al. (2011) PPG 34, 2 present a conceptual framework that integrates lawyers into existing legal geography scholarship.