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Interactional dilemmas occur when participants are required to
engage in two contradictory activities at the same time or orient
to two conflicting goals. The existence of such dilemmas provides a
context for interactants to be creative, pro-active, and indeed
strategic as they maneuver between the numerous demands placed on
them and produce behavior that fits the ongoing communication
episode. Trials are one such episode in which the various
participants -- in this case, the judge, the defendant, and lawyers
-- experience interactional dilemmas and work to resolve these
through their behavior.
This volume offers an analysis of both the institutional factors
which promote dilemmas during court proceedings and the
interactional behaviors used by trial participants to navigate
these dilemmas. Using ethnomethodology, conversation analysis, and
ethnography as complementary methods, Komter's research combines an
understanding of the legal rules for courtroom procedure and crime
descriptions, with details of actual trial discourse. The analysis
is based upon fieldnotes of 48 trials and audiotapes of 31 trials,
all related to violent crimes and occurring in courtrooms in
Amsterdam, Utrecht, and Haarlem.
Dilemmas reflect enduring conflicts of interest or values; they
derive from the ongoing institutional and interactional positions
of the various courtroom participants. Komter points to the
existence of dilemmas and to their role in shaping unfolding
interaction during the trials. She especially highlights the
different dilemmas faced by judges and suspects, and the ways in
which behavior on the part of one constrains that of the other. She
further reveals the wide variety of ways in which interactants
handle dilemmas -- their innovativeness and resourcefulness -- and
the consequences these have for the unfolding interaction and the
court's ultimate judgment.
Of course, dilemmas are not only relevant to an understanding of
judicial interaction. This study has implications for other
contexts, since concerns with credibility, blame, responsibility,
and morality -- and their opposites -- are incorporated into many
everyday interactions. This volume examines behavior that is quite
specific to a single context, yet its conclusions bear upon a wide
range of communication events.
Of interest to scholars in communication, linguistics,
anthropology, criminal justice, or those with interests in
ethnomethodology, conversation analysis, and ethnography.
Interactional dilemmas occur when participants are required to
engage in two contradictory activities at the same time or orient
to two conflicting goals. The existence of such dilemmas provides a
context for interactants to be creative, pro-active, and indeed
strategic as they maneuver between the numerous demands placed on
them and produce behavior that fits the ongoing communication
episode. Trials are one such episode in which the various
participants -- in this case, the judge, the defendant, and lawyers
-- experience interactional dilemmas and work to resolve these
through their behavior.
This volume offers an analysis of both the institutional factors
which promote dilemmas during court proceedings and the
interactional behaviors used by trial participants to navigate
these dilemmas. Using ethnomethodology, conversation analysis, and
ethnography as complementary methods, Komter's research combines an
understanding of the legal rules for courtroom procedure and crime
descriptions, with details of actual trial discourse. The analysis
is based upon fieldnotes of 48 trials and audiotapes of 31 trials,
all related to violent crimes and occurring in courtrooms in
Amsterdam, Utrecht, and Haarlem.
Dilemmas reflect enduring conflicts of interest or values; they
derive from the ongoing institutional and interactional positions
of the various courtroom participants. Komter points to the
existence of dilemmas and to their role in shaping unfolding
interaction during the trials. She especially highlights the
different dilemmas faced by judges and suspects, and the ways in
which behavior on the part of one constrains that of the other. She
further reveals the wide variety of ways in which interactants
handle dilemmas -- their innovativeness and resourcefulness -- and
the consequences these have for the unfolding interaction and the
court's ultimate judgment.
Of course, dilemmas are not only relevant to an understanding of
judicial interaction. This study has implications for other
contexts, since concerns with credibility, blame, responsibility,
and morality -- and their opposites -- are incorporated into many
everyday interactions. This volume examines behavior that is quite
specific to a single context, yet its conclusions bear upon a wide
range of communication events.
Of interest to scholars in communication, linguistics,
anthropology, criminal justice, or those with interests in
ethnomethodology, conversation analysis, and ethnography.
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