
The Studies In This Volume Use Ethnographic, Ethnomethodological, And Sociolinguistic Research To Demonstrate How Legal Agents Conduct Their Practices And Exercise Their Authority In Relation To Non-expert Participants And Broader Publics. Instead Of Treating Law As A Body Of Doctrines, Or Law And Society As A Relationship Between Legal Institutions And An External Society, The Studies In This Volume Closely Examine Law At Work: Specific Legal Practices And Social Interactions Produced In National And International Settings. These Settings Include Courtrooms And Other Tribunals, Consultations Between Lawyers And Clients, And Media Forums In Which Government Officials Address International Law. Because Law Is A Public Institution, And Legal Actions Are Publicly Accountable, Technical Law Must Interface With Non-expert Members Of The Public. The Embodied Actions And Interactions That Comprise The Interface Between Professional And Lay Participants In Legal Settings Therefore Must Do Justice To Legal Traditions And Statutory Obligations While Also Contending With Mundane Interactional Routines, Ordinary Reasoning, And Popular Expectations. Specific Chapters Examine Topics Such As Family Disputes In A System Of Sharia Law; Rhetorical Contestations About Possible Violations Of International Law During A Violent Conflict In The Middle-east; The Transformation Of A Courtroom Hearing Brought About By The Virtual Presence Of Remote Witnesses Relayed Through A Video Link; The Practices Through Which Written Records Are Used To Mediate And Leverage A Witness's Testimony; And The Discursive And Interactional Practices Through Which Authorized Parties Use Legal Categories To Problems With Individual Conduct. Each Chapter Shows That It Makes A Profound Difference To The Way We Understand The Law When We Examine Its Meaning And Application In Practice.
How do legal agents perform their professional duties and maintain authority when interacting with non-expert participants and the general public? This volume, edited by Baudouin Dupret, Michael J. Lynch, and Tim Berard, shifts the focus from abstract legal doctrine to the granular, observable practices of law in action. By utilizing ethnographic and ethnomethodological frameworks, the contributors argue that legal reality is constructed through mundane social interactions and discursive routines rather than existing solely as a static body of statutes.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this collection as a significant contribution to the sociology of law, particularly for its rigorous application of ethnomethodological principles to legal settings. Scholars frequently note that the prose is dense and requires a foundational understanding of social science research methods to fully appreciate the analytical depth.
Page Count:
304
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10:
0190210257
ISBN-13:
9780190210250
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