The article examines the professional emotion management underlying prosecutors’ work in court. Building on interviews and observations of 41 prosecutors at five offices in Sweden, and drawing on sociological theories of emotion habituation, we analyze the emotion management necessary to perform frontstage (in court) professionalism as a prosecutor. We divide our analysis into three key dimensions of habituation: the feeling rules of confidence and mastering anxiety associated with an independent performance; the feeling rules of emotional distance and a balanced display associated with performing the objective party; and the playful and strategic improvisation of feeling rules associated with relaxed emotional presence. The routinization o...
Judges are human and experience emotion when hearing cases, though the standard account of judging l...
Defence lawyers’ work takes place in emotionally charged, yet emotionally constraining situations. T...
This article argues that probation policy needs to take much greater account of the important role o...
The article examines the professional emotion management underlying prosecutors’ work in court. Buil...
The emotions of defence lawyers have garnered little sociological attention. This is surprising as t...
We examine key characteristics of the work tasks of judges and prosecutors from a power and status p...
Professional Emotions in Court examines the paramount role of emotions in the legal professions and ...
Traditionally, the law has been considered as devoid of emotions, however we now view the courtroom ...
Defense lawyers are portrayed as performing non-emotional work and their education does not train th...
Traditionally, the law has been considered as devoid of emotions, however recent research has begun ...
Like other Western legal systems, the Swedish legal system constructs objectivity as an unemotional ...
The article examines epistemic emotions as part of the emotive-cognitive processes of prosecutors' k...
The work of defence lawyers entails managing emotions to ensure that they remain appropriate to the ...
The courtroom work of defense lawyers has received surprisingly little sociological attention. What ...
Based on observations and in-depth interviews, this article explores the emotion work produces by at...
Judges are human and experience emotion when hearing cases, though the standard account of judging l...
Defence lawyers’ work takes place in emotionally charged, yet emotionally constraining situations. T...
This article argues that probation policy needs to take much greater account of the important role o...
The article examines the professional emotion management underlying prosecutors’ work in court. Buil...
The emotions of defence lawyers have garnered little sociological attention. This is surprising as t...
We examine key characteristics of the work tasks of judges and prosecutors from a power and status p...
Professional Emotions in Court examines the paramount role of emotions in the legal professions and ...
Traditionally, the law has been considered as devoid of emotions, however we now view the courtroom ...
Defense lawyers are portrayed as performing non-emotional work and their education does not train th...
Traditionally, the law has been considered as devoid of emotions, however recent research has begun ...
Like other Western legal systems, the Swedish legal system constructs objectivity as an unemotional ...
The article examines epistemic emotions as part of the emotive-cognitive processes of prosecutors' k...
The work of defence lawyers entails managing emotions to ensure that they remain appropriate to the ...
The courtroom work of defense lawyers has received surprisingly little sociological attention. What ...
Based on observations and in-depth interviews, this article explores the emotion work produces by at...
Judges are human and experience emotion when hearing cases, though the standard account of judging l...
Defence lawyers’ work takes place in emotionally charged, yet emotionally constraining situations. T...
This article argues that probation policy needs to take much greater account of the important role o...