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Shallow Equality and Symbolic Jurisprudence in Multilingual Legal Orders (Hardcover)
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Shallow Equality and Symbolic Jurisprudence in Multilingual Legal Orders (Hardcover)
Series: Oxford Studies in Language and Law
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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What challenges face jurisdictions that attempt to conduct law in
two or more languages? How does choosing a legal language affect
the way in which justice is delivered? Answers to these questions
are vital for the 75 officially bilingual and multilingual states
of the world, as well as for other states contemplating a move
towards multilingualism. Arguably such questions have implications
for all countries in a world characterized by the pressures of
globalization, economic integration, population mobility,
decolonization, and linguistic re-colonization. For lawyers,
addressing such challenges is made essential by the increased
frequency and scale of transnational legal dealings and
proceedings, as well as by the lengthening reach of international
law. But it is not only policy makers, legislators, and other legal
practitioners who must think about such questions. The relationship
between societal multilingualism and law also raises questions for
the burgeoning field of language and law, which posits-among other
tenets-the centrality of language in legal processes. In this book,
Janny H.C. Leung examines key aspects of legal multilingualism.
Drawing extensively on case studies, she describes the implications
of the legal, practical, and ideological dilemmas encountered in a
given country when it becomes bilingual or multilingual, discussing
such issues as: how legal certainty and the linguistic ideology of
authenticity may be challenged in a multilingual jurisdiction; how
courts balance the language preferences of different courtroom
participants; and what historical, socio-political and economic
factors may influence the decision to cement a given language as a
jurisdiction's official language. Throughout, Leung elaborates a
theory of "symbolic jurisprudence" to explore common dilemmas found
across countries, despite their varied political and cultural
settings, and argues that linguistic equality as proclaimed and
practiced today is a shallow kind of equality. Although officially
multilingual jurisdictions appear to be more inclusive than their
monolingual counterparts, they run the risk of disguising
substantive inequalities and displacing real efforts for more
progressive social change. This is the first book to offer
overarching discussion of how such issues relate to each other, and
the first systematic study of legal multilingualism as a global
phenomenon.
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