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Applied Anthropology in Juridical Grey Spaces
Anthropology in Action Pub Date : 2019-06-01 , DOI: 10.3167/aia.2019.260201
Amanda J. Reinke 1
Affiliation  

Informal justice refers to those legal practices that are traditionally outside the purview of formal law and legal systems. Since the advent of widespread social critique in the United States during the 1960s and 1970s, informal justice models have become increasingly popular and implemented in communities and within the legal system itself. The existence of informal justice mechanisms alongside and within formal justice systems in the US raises a number of questions for applied anthropologists interested in legal anthropology. In this article, I leverage four years of ethnographic fieldwork in the US to argue for the capacity of applied anthropologists to effectively work in grey juridical spaces that are beside and between the law, activism, and emerging bureaucratic regimes.

中文翻译:

司法灰色空间中的应用人类学

非正式司法是指传统上超出正式法律和法律制度范围的法律实践。自 1960 年代和 1970 年代美国出现广泛的社会批评以来,非正式司法模式在社区和法律体系本身中变得越来越流行和实施。在美国正式司法系统旁边和内部存在的非正式司法机制为对法律人类学感兴趣的应用人类学家提出了许多问题。在这篇文章中,我利用在美国四年的民族志田野工作来论证应用人类学家在法律、激进主义和新兴官僚体制之外和之间的灰色司法空间中有效工作的能力。
更新日期:2019-06-01
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