Through an ethnography of a terrorism trial that followed bomb‐blasts in Delhi in 2008, this article seeks to understand the centrality of files and documentary practices to the production of legal truth. By following key documents regarding the case against one man I call Fahad, I argue that the truth produced in a trial crucially depends a chain of seemingly insignificant certificatory practices‐the signatures, countersignatures, stamps, and seals that appear on documents. What emerges in the account I provide is that juridical truth is less a matter of finding ‘what really happened,’ and more about the competition between narratives that depend on the certificatory correctness of humble sheets of paper
Drawing upon qualitative data gathered during a four-year ethnographic study of homicide investigati...
Criminal trial hearings are communicative events that are densely intertextually structured. In the ...
This article focuses on prosecutors’ practices of drafting, critiquing and revising opening and clos...
Through an ethnography of a terrorism trial that followed bomb‐blasts in Delhi in 2008, this article...
How do we imagine the place of courtrooms in relation to society? There have been two dominant ways ...
This article draws on this idea of shared control over trial interactions between witnesses and lega...
An excerpt from ‘Terror Trials: Life and Law in Delhi’s Courts’, by Mayur R Suresh
This Article critically evaluates the relationship between constructing narratives and achieving fac...
International audienceIn this paper we explore how the notion of ‘truth’ is invoked and managed in c...
International audienceIn this paper we explore how the notion of ‘truth’ is invoked and managed prac...
This article aims to contrast a common opinion that people in India have a strong orientation to cou...
This article criticises H.L. Ho’s argument that the exclusion of improperly obtained evidence can be...
In an investigation of narrative representations that voice anomalies and irregularities in the pros...
This article addresses the way the Israeli criminal system uses secret evidence during the initial s...
Drawing upon qualitative data gathered during a four-year ethnographic study of homicide investigati...
Criminal trial hearings are communicative events that are densely intertextually structured. In the ...
This article focuses on prosecutors’ practices of drafting, critiquing and revising opening and clos...
Through an ethnography of a terrorism trial that followed bomb‐blasts in Delhi in 2008, this article...
How do we imagine the place of courtrooms in relation to society? There have been two dominant ways ...
This article draws on this idea of shared control over trial interactions between witnesses and lega...
An excerpt from ‘Terror Trials: Life and Law in Delhi’s Courts’, by Mayur R Suresh
This Article critically evaluates the relationship between constructing narratives and achieving fac...
International audienceIn this paper we explore how the notion of ‘truth’ is invoked and managed in c...
International audienceIn this paper we explore how the notion of ‘truth’ is invoked and managed prac...
This article aims to contrast a common opinion that people in India have a strong orientation to cou...
This article criticises H.L. Ho’s argument that the exclusion of improperly obtained evidence can be...
In an investigation of narrative representations that voice anomalies and irregularities in the pros...
This article addresses the way the Israeli criminal system uses secret evidence during the initial s...
Drawing upon qualitative data gathered during a four-year ethnographic study of homicide investigati...
Criminal trial hearings are communicative events that are densely intertextually structured. In the ...
This article focuses on prosecutors’ practices of drafting, critiquing and revising opening and clos...