'Property and the Anthropology of Law' is designed to give an overview of anthropological approaches to understanding processes of establishing order and attaining justice in different social contexts, by having in focus property relations and customary law in historical and contemporary Albania and Kosovo as instructive case. Through readings whose scope extends from the early classics of ethnographic work; to more recent inquires about how legal and law-like orders are negotiated in national, international and global connections; to those that are concerned with what law, legal culture and justice means in the daily lives of people, we will explore what various anthropologist working in different historical periods have had to say about these topics and what questions they have asked about legal culture, power, control and justice in their specific fieldwork sites.