Kashimura2015
Kashimura2015 | |
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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 |
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Pages | 87–113 |
URL | Link |
DOI | 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190210243.003.0005 |
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Book title | Law at Work: Studies in Legal Ethnomethods |
Chapter |
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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