The study of the connections between critical legal studies and critical geography scholarship. Legal geography scholarship stresses that nearly every aspect of law has some spatial frame of reference, and that social spaces, lived places, and landscapes are inscribed with legal significance. Distinctively legal forms of meaning are projected on to every segment of the physical world. Such fragments of a socially segmented world are not simply the inert sites of law, but are inextricably implicated in how law happens (I. Braverman, N. Blomley, D. Delaney, and A. Kedar, eds, 2013). See N. Blomley, D. Delaney, and R. Ford, eds (2001).