Difference between revisions of "Weller2020"

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|Year=2020
 
|Year=2020
 
|Language=English
 
|Language=English
 +
|Address=London
 
|Booktitle=Legal Rules in Practice: In the Midst of Law's Life
 
|Booktitle=Legal Rules in Practice: In the Midst of Law's Life
 
|Pages=113–132
 
|Pages=113–132
 +
|URL=https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9781003046776-9/reading-case-files-jean-marc-weller
 
|DOI=10.4324/9781003046776-9
 
|DOI=10.4324/9781003046776-9
 
|ISBN=978-1-00-304677-6
 
|ISBN=978-1-00-304677-6
 
|Abstract=This chapter investigates the question of how a legal file is read. He addresses one of the unavoidable activities of any practice of the legal rule when examined in its ordinary accomplishment: reading. More specifically, the chapter deals with the reading of files. How do civil servants who are in charge of the assessment of a situation and of the characterization of the facts constitutive of it read documents contained in corresponding files? On the basis of several inquiries in the activities of agents of the Ministry of Agriculture in charge of defining farmers' payment rights, the chapter examines unremarkable situations of bureaucrats' reading of documents contained in files from the time of their first encounter with them. Beyond the issue of potentially diverse practices of reading, one can observe different conceptions of the rule and of public action. Administrative work should be studied ``at work'' from an ethnographic and anthropological angle. Two perspectives will be discussed. The first one uses the concept of ``literacy'' as proposed by Goody and discussed in literacy studies. The second one is in line with the teachings of sciences and technology studies, as inspired e.g. by Latour. The praxeological and pragmatic specificity of legal practices will be analysed from this double perspective and on the basis of contextualized empirical material.
 
|Abstract=This chapter investigates the question of how a legal file is read. He addresses one of the unavoidable activities of any practice of the legal rule when examined in its ordinary accomplishment: reading. More specifically, the chapter deals with the reading of files. How do civil servants who are in charge of the assessment of a situation and of the characterization of the facts constitutive of it read documents contained in corresponding files? On the basis of several inquiries in the activities of agents of the Ministry of Agriculture in charge of defining farmers' payment rights, the chapter examines unremarkable situations of bureaucrats' reading of documents contained in files from the time of their first encounter with them. Beyond the issue of potentially diverse practices of reading, one can observe different conceptions of the rule and of public action. Administrative work should be studied ``at work'' from an ethnographic and anthropological angle. Two perspectives will be discussed. The first one uses the concept of ``literacy'' as proposed by Goody and discussed in literacy studies. The second one is in line with the teachings of sciences and technology studies, as inspired e.g. by Latour. The praxeological and pragmatic specificity of legal practices will be analysed from this double perspective and on the basis of contextualized empirical material.
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 00:14, 3 July 2023

Weller2020
BibType INCOLLECTION
Key Weller2020
Author(s) Jean-Marc Weller
Title Reading Case Files: The Material Organization of Cases and the Work of Judges
Editor(s) Baudouin Dupret, Julie Colemans, Max Travers
Tag(s) EMCA, Courtroom, Legal, Law, Ethnomethodology, Literacy, Reading
Publisher Routledge
Year 2020
Language English
City London
Month
Journal
Volume
Number
Pages 113–132
URL Link
DOI 10.4324/9781003046776-9
ISBN 978-1-00-304677-6
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title Legal Rules in Practice: In the Midst of Law's Life
Chapter

Download BibTex

Abstract

This chapter investigates the question of how a legal file is read. He addresses one of the unavoidable activities of any practice of the legal rule when examined in its ordinary accomplishment: reading. More specifically, the chapter deals with the reading of files. How do civil servants who are in charge of the assessment of a situation and of the characterization of the facts constitutive of it read documents contained in corresponding files? On the basis of several inquiries in the activities of agents of the Ministry of Agriculture in charge of defining farmers' payment rights, the chapter examines unremarkable situations of bureaucrats' reading of documents contained in files from the time of their first encounter with them. Beyond the issue of potentially diverse practices of reading, one can observe different conceptions of the rule and of public action. Administrative work should be studied ``at work from an ethnographic and anthropological angle. Two perspectives will be discussed. The first one uses the concept of ``literacy as proposed by Goody and discussed in literacy studies. The second one is in line with the teachings of sciences and technology studies, as inspired e.g. by Latour. The praxeological and pragmatic specificity of legal practices will be analysed from this double perspective and on the basis of contextualized empirical material.

Notes