The law that could be: poverty, power, and radical legal imagination. Investigating the indirect criminalisation of poverty in Western legal systems and the possibilities for law as a space of transformative justice
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Abstract
The indirect criminalisation of poverty represents a structural injustice in Western legal
systems. While poverty is not formally criminalised, economically marginalized populations
are consistently subjected to punitive treatment through administrative regulation, welfare
conditionality, and spatial control. Legal systems, often viewed as neutral or rights-based,
instead function as instruments of exclusion shaped by neoliberal economic logics and
dominant moralities. This thesis builds on Sara S. Greene’s theory of legal immobility and
draws from critical legal studies, political economy, and human rights theory to interrogate
how law contributes to the marginalization of the poor. Through a comparative case study of
Spain, France, and the United Kingdom, it examines how diverse legal regimes converge in
their punitive governance of poverty. Beyond critique, this investigation contends that
confronting inequality requires a radical rethinking of law itself. It develops the concept of
radical legal imagination to argue that law must be reclaimed as a space of collective
authorship, capable of embodying justice, dignity, and solidarity. By connecting critical legal
analysis with imaginative reconstruction, the thesis challenges the normative foundations of
legal systems and opens space for alternative, emancipatory legal futures.
Description
Second semester University: University of Coimbra