Navigating between Narrations: Voices That Construct and Undermine the Credibility of the Legal System

The article argues that judicial narratives, produced in & out of the courtroom in order to represent real-world events, are biased toward presenting the judicial process as being objective, impartial, & trustworthy, while censoring narratives that oppose this bias. Supporting data is provid...

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Veröffentlicht in:Athenea digital 2005-01 (8), p.109-128
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description The article argues that judicial narratives, produced in & out of the courtroom in order to represent real-world events, are biased toward presenting the judicial process as being objective, impartial, & trustworthy, while censoring narratives that oppose this bias. Supporting data is provided by interviews with professionals in the legal field as well as two former prisoners & their family members. The discussion views the justice system as a form of social practice that does not differ from other social practices, in the sense that the justice system is nothing more than a social construction. This approach has allowed the researchers to demystify the judicial world by locating it within the human sphere, thus stripping the justice system of the quasi-divine character that has been conferred upon it by society. References. R. Young
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source DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; Sociological Abstracts; Revistes Catalanes amb Accés Obert (RACO)
subjects Bias
Judges
Judicial Decisions
Legal System
Narratives
title Navigating between Narrations: Voices That Construct and Undermine the Credibility of the Legal System
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