In this chapter we analyze cases where social movement activists are prosecuted in the courts for protest actions. The courthouse is a significant arena for social movement strategy, a symbolic site for the arbitration of collective disputes, the legitimization of political action, and the production of social meaning; the court is “one of society’s most sacred institutions since its role in defining, interpreting and enforcing the law puts it in close proximity to the moral basis of society” (Antonio, 1972, p.291-2). The outcomes of trials depend on the organization of the criminal justice system but also the responses and strategies of multiple other players, inside and outside the court, including social movement activists, allies and su...
The trial of the Conspiracy 8-later-7 has opened a Pandora\u27s box of questions about the American ...
This is a study of attempts to use civil tort action to stifle political expression. These lawsuits ...
From the trial of Socrates to the post-9/11 military commissions, trials have always been useful ins...
In this chapter we analyze cases where social movement activists are prosecuted in the courts for pr...
In this important book, Jan Willem Duyvendak and James M. Jasper bring together an internationally a...
With the courts increasingly being the forum for legal disputes between those who demand change in t...
Players and Arenas brings together a diverse group of experts to examine the interactions between po...
Normative theories of law conceive the courtroom as a geometrically delineated, politically neutral,...
We bring Foucauldian and Goffmanian frameworks into dialogue to show how repressive and disciplinary...
In this presentation, we explore courts as an emerging arena on which political and social contestat...
Most countries are not able to hold guilty parties responsible for violating people's most fundament...
This book delves into the rationale, components of, and responses to accusations of judicial activis...
How does protest become criminalised? Applying an anthropological perspective to political and legal...
The judiciary has excelled in the international and national scene, reaching role of great importanc...
In this important book, Jan Willem Duyvendak and James M. Jasper bring together an internationally a...
The trial of the Conspiracy 8-later-7 has opened a Pandora\u27s box of questions about the American ...
This is a study of attempts to use civil tort action to stifle political expression. These lawsuits ...
From the trial of Socrates to the post-9/11 military commissions, trials have always been useful ins...
In this chapter we analyze cases where social movement activists are prosecuted in the courts for pr...
In this important book, Jan Willem Duyvendak and James M. Jasper bring together an internationally a...
With the courts increasingly being the forum for legal disputes between those who demand change in t...
Players and Arenas brings together a diverse group of experts to examine the interactions between po...
Normative theories of law conceive the courtroom as a geometrically delineated, politically neutral,...
We bring Foucauldian and Goffmanian frameworks into dialogue to show how repressive and disciplinary...
In this presentation, we explore courts as an emerging arena on which political and social contestat...
Most countries are not able to hold guilty parties responsible for violating people's most fundament...
This book delves into the rationale, components of, and responses to accusations of judicial activis...
How does protest become criminalised? Applying an anthropological perspective to political and legal...
The judiciary has excelled in the international and national scene, reaching role of great importanc...
In this important book, Jan Willem Duyvendak and James M. Jasper bring together an internationally a...
The trial of the Conspiracy 8-later-7 has opened a Pandora\u27s box of questions about the American ...
This is a study of attempts to use civil tort action to stifle political expression. These lawsuits ...
From the trial of Socrates to the post-9/11 military commissions, trials have always been useful ins...