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Books > Law > Jurisprudence & general issues > Legal profession
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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