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Time, Temporality and Legal Judgment
Contributor(s): Chowdhury, Tanzil (Author)
ISBN: 1138324507     ISBN-13: 9781138324503
Publisher: Routledge
OUR PRICE:   $171.00  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: July 2020
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Law | Jurisprudence
- Philosophy | Political
- Education | Teaching Methods & Materials - Arts & Humanities
Dewey: 340.1
LCCN: 2020008941
Physical Information: 0.44" H x 6.14" W x 9.21" (0.93 lbs) 160 pages
 
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Publisher Description:

This book challenges the correspondence theory of judicial fact construction - that legal rules resemble and subsume facts 'out there' - and instead provides an account of judicial fact construction through legally produced times- or adjudicative temporalities- that structure legal subject and event formation in legal judgement.

Drawing on Bergsonian and Gadamerian theories of time, this book details how certain adjudicative temporalities can produce fully willed and autonomous subjects through 'time framed' legal events - in effect, the paradigmatic liberal legal subject - or how alternative adjudicative temporalities may structure legal subjects that are situated and constituted by social structures. The consequences of this novel account of legal judgement are fourfold. The first is that judicial fact construction is not exclusively determined by the legal rule (s) but by adjudication's production of temporalities. The second is that the selection between different adjudicative temporalities is generally indeterminate, though influenced by wider social structures. As will be argued, social structures, framed as a particular type of past produced by certain adjudicative temporalities, may either be incorporated in the rendering of the legal event or elided. The third is that, with the book's focus on criminal law, different deployments of adjudicative temporalities effect responsibility ascription. Finally, it is argued that the demystification of time as that which structures event and subject formation reveals another way in which to uncover the politics of legal judgement and the potential for its transformative potential, through either its inclusion or its elision of social structures in adjudication's determination of facts.

This book will be of interest to students and scholars in the field of legal judgement, legal theory and jurisprudence.