This book analyses laws distinctively normative contribution to place-making. In an original, cross-disciplinary, analysis drawing on scholarship in law, geography, philosophy and politics, Antonia Layard considers how law operates in the fixing of borders that both protect and exclude. Centred upon four legal case studies ¿ on public space; housing regulation; rules on the manifestation of religion; and geographic indications in intellectual property law ¿ the book pursues a critical geographical consideration of how place is integral to ideas about identity, belonging and territory.