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Article
Applied Anthropology in Juridical Grey Spaces
Anthropology in Action (2019)
  • Amanda Reinke, Kennesaw State University
Abstract
Informal justice refers to those legal practices that are traditionally outside the purview of formal law and legal systems. Since the advent of widespread social critique in the United States during the 1960s and 1970s, informal justice models have become increasingly popular and implemented in communities and within the legal system itself. The existence of informal justice mechanisms alongside and within formal justice systems in the US raises a number of questions for applied anthropologists interested in legal anthropology. In this article, I leverage four years of ethnographic fieldwork in the US to argue for the capacity of applied anthropologists to eectively work in grey juridical spaces that are beside and between the law, activism, and emerging bureaucratic regimes.
Keywords
  • bureaucracy,
  • informal justice,
  • legal anthropology,
  • restorative justice,
  • United States
Publication Date
2019
DOI
10.3167/aia.2019.260201
Citation Information
Amanda Reinke. "Applied Anthropology in Juridical Grey Spaces" Anthropology in Action Vol. 26 Iss. 2 (2019) p. 1 - 8 ISSN: 1752-2285
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/amandareinke/23/