Book contents
- The Law Multiple
- Cambridge Studies in Law and Society
- The Law Multiple
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Acknowledgments
- Note on the Text
- 1 Troubling Encounters
- 2 Abstractionism, Revisited
- 3 Dealing with Difference
- 4 Situating Remorse
- 5 Visualizing Cases
- 6 Folding Times, Making Truths
- 7 Productive Fictions for the Study of the Law
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index
- Cambridge Studies in Law and Society
5 - Visualizing Cases
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 February 2021
- The Law Multiple
- Cambridge Studies in Law and Society
- The Law Multiple
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Acknowledgments
- Note on the Text
- 1 Troubling Encounters
- 2 Abstractionism, Revisited
- 3 Dealing with Difference
- 4 Situating Remorse
- 5 Visualizing Cases
- 6 Folding Times, Making Truths
- 7 Productive Fictions for the Study of the Law
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index
- Cambridge Studies in Law and Society
Summary
This chapter highlights judicial file-work backstage. It is particularly interested in the socially distributed and materially mediated character of these practices, and zooms in on the techniques judges have developed to navigate case files accurately and efficiently. It also traces how these work practices were disrupted and rearticulation as a result of the digitization of legal case files. In so doing, this chapter shows how an emphasis on this non-human actor – the legal case file – can rearticulate understandings of judicial decision-making and rule-following that locate it in the “head of the judge”. Tracing how and where judges draw on the legal case file in their sense-making, this chapter instead treats both judicial thinking and seeing as empirically investigable phenomena, and suggests that our conceptions of legal practices can benefit from paying attention to the materiality of legal case files. In so doing, it treats case files not (only) as informational objects, but materially recalcitrant objects that shape and direct judicial attention in specific ways.
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- Information
- The Law MultipleJudgment and Knowledge in Practice, pp. 116 - 140Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021