The law multiple : judgment and knowledge in practice / Irene van Oorschot, Erasmus University Rotterdam
Material type: TextSeries: Publisher: Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2021Description: 1 online resource (xiii, 205 pages)ISBN: 9781108859981 (ebook); 9781108796996Subject(s): Practice of law | Sociological jurisprudenceDDC classification: 340/.115 Online resources: Click here to access online | Click here to access onlineItem type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | Gabriel Afolabi Ojo Central Library (Headquarters). | K120 .O57 2023 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 0194565 | |
Books | Gabriel Afolabi Ojo Central Library (Headquarters). | K120 .O57 2023 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 0194564 |
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K52.0942020 DICTIONARY OF LAW | K52.0942020 DICTIONARY OF LAW | K52.0942020 DICTIONARY OF LAW | K120 .O57 2023 The law multiple : judgment and knowledge in practice / | K120 .O57 2023 The law multiple : judgment and knowledge in practice / | K434.A7 .G46 2022 Aristotle and law : the politics of nomos / | K434.A7 .G46 2022 Aristotle and law : the politics of nomos / |
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 22 Feb 2021)
Troubling encounters -- Abstractionism, revisited -- Dealing with difference : doing criminal law and social order -- Situating remorse -- Visualizing cases -- Folding times, making truths -- Productive fictions for the study of the law : from hyper-explanation to hyper object
In the field of socio-legal studies or law and society scholarship, it is rare to find empirically rich and conceptually sophisticated understandings of actual legal practice. This book, in contrast, connects the conceptual and the empirical, the abstract and the concrete, and in doing so shows the law to be an irreducibly social, material and temporal practice. Drawing on cutting-edge work in the social study of knowledge, it grapples with conceptual and methodological questions central to the field: how and where judgment empirically takes place; how and where facts are made; and how researchers might study these local and concrete ways of judging and knowing. Drawing on an ethnographic study of how narratives and documents, particularly case files, operate within legal practices, this book's unique and innovative approach consists of rearticulating the traditional boundaries separating judgment from knowledge, urging us to rethink the way truths are made within law
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