Siirry suoraan sisältöön
  1. Kirjat
  2. Tietokirjallisuus
  3. Politiikka ja yhteiskunta

Adversarial Case-Making

224,80 €

Cases are not objects at hand for legal decision-making; cases are not echoes from a past crime. Cases are, first of all, made within compound discourse apparatus, here the English Crown Court and the procedure/s attached to it. This book reveals the legal production of cases including their relevant features. The socio-legal ethnography visits the natural sites of adversarial case-making: law firms, barristers’ chambers, and Crown Courts. It examines the role and dynamics of client-lawyer meetings, pre-trial hearings, plea bargaining sessions, and jury trials. It focuses on the lawyers’ case-making activities, their procedural contexts, and the resulting cases. As an ethnographic discourse study, the book develops a trans-sequential perspective on the interrelated events and processes of case-making – and by doing so, overcomes the shortcomings of talk-bias and text-bias. The trans-sequential approach pays out in detailed case studies on an alibi, on guilt, or the barrister’s notes; it pays out as well in cross-case studies dealing with legal care, procedural infrastructure, or the case system in the common law tradition.

Alaotsikko
An Ethnography of English Crown Court Procedure
Kirjailija
Scheffer Thomas
ISBN
9789004187269
Kieli
englanti
Paino
706 grammaa
Julkaisupäivä
24.9.2010
Kustantaja
Brill
Sivumäärä
286