In what follows we make it clear that anthropologists called as experts in legal proceedings are legally obliged to eschew any tendency to advocacy in relation to the groups or individuals about which they provide expert evidence. We briefly chart the increasingly diverse and theoretically eclectic discipline, in part through the case studies, as these provide analyses of the range of contexts within which expert anthropologists work as interlocutors with (often) non-English speaking peoples, and typically (but certainly not always) in situations of marked social marginality and relative powerlessness. Indeed, it is because of the discipline�s history of research with the non-dominant, the socially excluded and the colonised that from th...