Difference between revisions of "Kashimura2015"

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|BibType=INCOLLECTION
 
|BibType=INCOLLECTION
 
|Author(s)=Shiro Kashimura
 
|Author(s)=Shiro Kashimura
|Title=Hearing Clients' Talk as Lawyers' Work: The Case of Public Legal Consultation Conference
+
|Title=Hearing clients' talk as lawyers' work: the case of public legal consultation conference
|Editor(s)=Baudouin Dupret; Michael Lynch; Tim Berard;  
+
|Editor(s)=Baudouin Dupret; Michael Lynch; Tim Berard;
|Tag(s)=Ethnomethodology; Law;  
+
|Tag(s)=Ethnomethodology; Law;
 
|Key=Kashimura2015
 
|Key=Kashimura2015
 +
|Publisher=Oxford University Press
 
|Year=2015
 
|Year=2015
 +
|Language=English
 +
|Address=Oxford
 +
|Booktitle=Law at Work: Studies in Legal Ethnomethods
 +
|Pages=87–113
 +
|URL=https://www.oxfordscholarship.com/view/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190210243.001.0001/acprof-9780190210243-chapter-5
 +
|DOI=10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190210243.003.0005
 +
|Abstract=Drawing on transcripts of public legal consultation conferences in Japan, this chapter explicates some methodic ways in which a member of the legal profession hears a citizen/client’s talk. It shows how (1) the conversational organization of the conference makes any individual piece of information displayed in the conversational turns observable as a feature of client’s telling and lawyer’s hearing; (2) lawyer’s ongoing and contingent judgments about the information told by the client are also displayed and made noticeable in the process; and (3) distinctively legal features of the story emerge through the differential but mutual attentiveness to the telling and hearing of a story of trouble. As a whole, the chapter presents and analyzes an instance of the social construction of legality as a uniquely situated methodic achievement in a lawyer’s hearing, fact-finding, and glossing of a story told in a legal setting.
 
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Latest revision as of 10:51, 15 December 2019

Kashimura2015
BibType INCOLLECTION
Key Kashimura2015
Author(s) Shiro Kashimura
Title Hearing clients' talk as lawyers' work: the case of public legal consultation conference
Editor(s) Baudouin Dupret, Michael Lynch, Tim Berard
Tag(s) Ethnomethodology, Law
Publisher Oxford University Press
Year 2015
Language English
City Oxford
Month
Journal
Volume
Number
Pages 87–113
URL Link
DOI 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190210243.003.0005
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title Law at Work: Studies in Legal Ethnomethods
Chapter

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Abstract

Drawing on transcripts of public legal consultation conferences in Japan, this chapter explicates some methodic ways in which a member of the legal profession hears a citizen/client’s talk. It shows how (1) the conversational organization of the conference makes any individual piece of information displayed in the conversational turns observable as a feature of client’s telling and lawyer’s hearing; (2) lawyer’s ongoing and contingent judgments about the information told by the client are also displayed and made noticeable in the process; and (3) distinctively legal features of the story emerge through the differential but mutual attentiveness to the telling and hearing of a story of trouble. As a whole, the chapter presents and analyzes an instance of the social construction of legality as a uniquely situated methodic achievement in a lawyer’s hearing, fact-finding, and glossing of a story told in a legal setting.

Notes