Justin Richland's 'Jurisdiction: Grounding Law in Language', due to appear in the (2013) 42 Annual Review of Anthropology, is on SSRN:
Jurisdiction,
a concept often demarcating law’s territorial scope, and thus the bounds of
state sovereignty, is offered here as a theory of legal language and its
relation to law’s social force. Reconsidered in light of its etymology as
“law’s speech,” new theories of jurisdiction suggest how law is simultaneously
founded and enacted through language both spectacular (such as courtroom
arguments or in the preambles of constitutions) and mundane (such as in legal
aid in-take exchanges, or in the forms of bureaucratic records). Jurisdiction
points up how the force of law, and the sovereignty that law’s force
presupposes, can be seen as being made, and made seemingly unassailable, in the
discursive and textual details of law’s actual accomplishment. This review
considers a segment of legal language scholarship produced in recent decades,
while arguing for the ground that language, as jurisdiction, always holds for
law and sovereignty.
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