Laws and stories : an ethnographic study of Maltese legal representation

This thesis is the outcome of anthropological fieldwork in Malta, focusing on the process of legal representation during court litigation. Paul Ricoew's (1984) theory of narration is applied to enhance understanding of legal representation. It highlights the social uses of narrative as a discur...

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Main Author: Zammit, David E.
Published: Durham University 1998
Subjects:
301
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.264765
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-2647652015-03-19T05:36:37ZLaws and stories : an ethnographic study of Maltese legal representationZammit, David E.1998This thesis is the outcome of anthropological fieldwork in Malta, focusing on the process of legal representation during court litigation. Paul Ricoew's (1984) theory of narration is applied to enhance understanding of legal representation. It highlights the social uses of narrative as a discursive vehicle mediating between litigants' subjective experience and paradigmatic legal rules. It is argued that legal representation can be fruitfully investigated from the standpoint of the story-telling relations involved. The relations of production, exchange and consumption of evidence before the Maltese courts are then explored. It is shown how clients' stories are often attempts to control socially distant lawyers by engulfing them in patronage relationships. Lawyers' diffident reactions are in turn derived from their efforts to balance between patronage and professional ideals of detachment. This is reflected in the way lawyers draft judicial acts during litigation, where 'patron’ lawyers tend to give most weight to the subjunctive stories' of clients. This same tension between paradigmatic legal rules and subjunctive stories' also characterises the production of testimony in court. Both court-room litigation and adjudication operate to produce a single narrative version of the facts. This reflects the moral pressure which stories place on judges, compelling them to reinterpret the legal rules. Finally these observations are embedded within Maltese society and their theoretical implications elaborated. This thesis demonstrates how court litigation is the site of disguised processes of abstraction and contextualisation, where the abstracting of 'paradigmatic narratives' founds legal entitlement and the narrative contextualisation of legal rules leads to their re-interpretation. This indicates that legal rules are closer to social experience than is often thought and illuminates the relationship between legal and anthropological representation. Recent anthropological trends to resort to narrative modes of description are seen to be implicitly juridical.301AnthropologyDurham Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.264765http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/5050/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 301
Anthropology
spellingShingle 301
Anthropology
Zammit, David E.
Laws and stories : an ethnographic study of Maltese legal representation
description This thesis is the outcome of anthropological fieldwork in Malta, focusing on the process of legal representation during court litigation. Paul Ricoew's (1984) theory of narration is applied to enhance understanding of legal representation. It highlights the social uses of narrative as a discursive vehicle mediating between litigants' subjective experience and paradigmatic legal rules. It is argued that legal representation can be fruitfully investigated from the standpoint of the story-telling relations involved. The relations of production, exchange and consumption of evidence before the Maltese courts are then explored. It is shown how clients' stories are often attempts to control socially distant lawyers by engulfing them in patronage relationships. Lawyers' diffident reactions are in turn derived from their efforts to balance between patronage and professional ideals of detachment. This is reflected in the way lawyers draft judicial acts during litigation, where 'patron’ lawyers tend to give most weight to the subjunctive stories' of clients. This same tension between paradigmatic legal rules and subjunctive stories' also characterises the production of testimony in court. Both court-room litigation and adjudication operate to produce a single narrative version of the facts. This reflects the moral pressure which stories place on judges, compelling them to reinterpret the legal rules. Finally these observations are embedded within Maltese society and their theoretical implications elaborated. This thesis demonstrates how court litigation is the site of disguised processes of abstraction and contextualisation, where the abstracting of 'paradigmatic narratives' founds legal entitlement and the narrative contextualisation of legal rules leads to their re-interpretation. This indicates that legal rules are closer to social experience than is often thought and illuminates the relationship between legal and anthropological representation. Recent anthropological trends to resort to narrative modes of description are seen to be implicitly juridical.
author Zammit, David E.
author_facet Zammit, David E.
author_sort Zammit, David E.
title Laws and stories : an ethnographic study of Maltese legal representation
title_short Laws and stories : an ethnographic study of Maltese legal representation
title_full Laws and stories : an ethnographic study of Maltese legal representation
title_fullStr Laws and stories : an ethnographic study of Maltese legal representation
title_full_unstemmed Laws and stories : an ethnographic study of Maltese legal representation
title_sort laws and stories : an ethnographic study of maltese legal representation
publisher Durham University
publishDate 1998
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.264765
work_keys_str_mv AT zammitdavide lawsandstoriesanethnographicstudyofmalteselegalrepresentation
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