A call for ethnographying the judiciary (beyond the courtroom)

IF 0.6 Q2 Social Sciences
Raúl Márquez Porras
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

My contribution to the 40th anniversary of the Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law is a call for further development of a methodology, ethnography, and an anthropologist’s reflection on how it has been conceived (and underdeveloped) so far in the field of socio-legal studies and research on contemporary judicial systems. Studying on the ground how and by whom law is applied – or disregarded, changed, contested – has been one of the main goals of legal anthropology since its inception as a field of study (Bens and Vetters 2018). However, it has been carried out mainly in post-colonial contexts, despite the fact that since the 1970s anthropologists have also turned their attention to the elites of the West (Nader 1972) and shared a broadened conception of pluralism that takes “official law seriously as a subject of ethnographic research” (Bens and Vetters 2018, 240). The point is that in-depth ethnographies devoted to western judicial systems are still rare, and the few we find take a narrow approach that focuses on what happens in the courtroom. The problem, then, is not only to do ethnography about (or in) the judiciary, but to decide what kind of ethnography to do. I elaborate on this critique in the remainder of this essay, proposing some lines of research and approaches that draw on the classical formulation of the case study, as well as on recent works published in this journal and in the context of southern Europe (Spain and Italy). Most ethnographies about the judiciary in contemporary societies take courts as their only space for observation (there is a so-called “courtroom ethnography”, in fact). Additionally, they do so using approaches more or less related to ethnomethodology – conversation analysis, semiotics and dramaturgy – focusing on the analysis of discourses, symbols and interactions: the setting and atmosphere in the courtroom, the routines and performances of the different actors, the dialogues they establish, etc., in order to consider what all this reveals about the different roles, hierarchies, legal cultures and ideologies involved (Philips 1998; Garapon 1999; Dahlberg 2009; Bens 2018). These courtroom-centred ethnographies offer vivid descriptions and detailed analyses of particular proceedings. They identify unsuspected issues, such as patterns of behaviour, distinctive judging styles, and conflict and power dynamics, among others (Conley and O’Barr 1988, 478–479). However, as discourse analysts recognise,
呼吁对司法系统进行人种学研究(在法庭之外)
我对《法律多元主义与非正式法》杂志创刊40周年的贡献是呼吁进一步发展一种方法,人种学,以及人类学家对迄今为止在社会法律研究和当代司法系统研究领域是如何构想(和不发达)的反思。实地研究法律是如何以及由谁应用的——或被忽视、改变、争议——自法律人类学作为一个研究领域成立以来,一直是它的主要目标之一(Bens和veters 2018)。然而,它主要是在后殖民背景下进行的,尽管自20世纪70年代以来,人类学家也将注意力转向了西方的精英(Nader 1972),并分享了一种更广泛的多元主义概念,即“将官方法律认真视为民族志研究的主题”(Bens和veters 2018, 240)。重点是,深入研究西方司法体系的民族志仍然很少,而且我们发现的少数几本都采取了狭隘的方法,专注于法庭上发生的事情。那么,问题就不仅仅是要做关于(或在)司法部门的民族志,而是要决定做什么样的民族志。在本文的剩余部分,我将详细阐述这一批评,提出一些研究思路和方法,这些研究思路和方法借鉴了案例研究的经典公式,以及最近发表在本杂志上的作品和南欧(西班牙和意大利)的背景。大多数关于当代社会司法的民族志都把法庭作为他们唯一的观察空间(事实上,有一种所谓的“法庭民族志”)。此外,他们使用或多或少与民族方法学相关的方法——对话分析、符号学和戏剧学——重点分析话语、符号和相互作用:法庭的环境和气氛、不同演员的惯例和表演、他们建立的对话等,以考虑所有这些揭示了不同的角色、等级制度、法律文化和意识形态(Philips 1998;Garapon 1999;Dahlberg 2009;本斯2018年)。这些以法庭为中心的民族志提供了对特定诉讼程序的生动描述和详细分析。他们发现了一些意料之外的问题,比如行为模式、独特的判断风格、冲突和权力动态等等(Conley和O 'Barr 1988,478 - 479)。然而,正如话语分析者所认识到的,
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期刊介绍: As the pioneering journal in this field The Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law (JLP) has a long history of publishing leading scholarship in the area of legal anthropology and legal pluralism and is the only international journal dedicated to the analysis of legal pluralism. It is a refereed scholarly journal with a genuinely global reach, publishing both empirical and theoretical contributions from a variety of disciplines, including (but not restricted to) Anthropology, Legal Studies, Development Studies and interdisciplinary studies. The JLP is devoted to scholarly writing and works that further current debates in the field of legal pluralism and to disseminating new and emerging findings from fieldwork. The Journal welcomes papers that make original contributions to understanding any aspect of legal pluralism and unofficial law, anywhere in the world, both in historic and contemporary contexts. We invite high-quality, original submissions that engage with this purpose.
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