If knowledge is power, then the power of law can be studied through
the lens of knowledge. This book opens up a substantive new area of
legal research--knowledge production--and presents a series of case
studies showing that the hybridity and eclecticism of legal knowledge
processes make it unfruitful to ask questions such as, "Is law
becoming more dominated by science?" Mariana Valverde argues that
legal decision making cannot be understood if one counterposes science
and technology, on the one hand, to common knowledge and common sense
on the other. The case studies of law's flexible collage of knowledges
range from determinations of drunkenness made by liquor licensing
inspectors and by police, through police testimony in "indecency"
cases, to how judges define the "truth" of sexuality and the harm that
obscenity poses to communities. Valverde emphasizes that the types of
knowledge that circulate in such legal arenas consist of "facts,"
values, and codes from numerous incompatible sources that combine to
produce interesting hybrids with wide-ranging legal and social
effects. Drawing on Foucaultian and other analytical tools, she
cogently demonstrates that different modes of knowledge, and hence
various forms of power, coexist happily. Law's Dream of a Common
Knowledge underlines the importance of analyzing dynamically how
knowledge formation works. And it helps us to better understand the
workings of power and resistance in a variety of contemporary
contexts. It will interest scholars and students from disciplines
including law, sociology, anthropology, history, and
science-and-technology studies as well as those concerned with the
particular issues raised by the case studies.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781400825561
Publisert
2013
Utgiver
Princeton University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Antall sider
264
Forfatter