Description
Culture as Judicial Evidence in Latin America summarizes the current state of this work in six countries: Mexico, Costa Rica, Peru, Chile, Colombia, and Uruguay, and lays out the challenges and dilemmas involved in the creation and use of cultural expert testimony. Organized into three sections, the book advances a framework for the use of cultural evidence, and presents readers with nine case studies based on trials in six individual countries. These countries have implemented legal reform, constitutional amendments and the adoption of international legislation to create the legal frameworks that enable this new form of legal evidence to be admissible in Latin American courts. The contributing authors are cultural anthropologists with vast experience researching the impact of cultural expert witness testimony. A forward-looking final section examines the dilemmas and challenges of this work that remain to be solved.
About the Author
Leila Rodriguez is an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Cincinnati. She is also an affiliate of the university's Department of Africana Studies, Department of Sociology, and Latin American Studies Program.
Reviews
Culture as Judicial Evidence is the first anthropological study of expert witness testimony about cultural matters in Latin American legal contexts. This fine volume provides valuable insights into ethnographic interventions concerning life and death matters involving human rights abuses, migration, political freedoms, indigenous rights, and gender identities.
* Howard Campbell, University of Texas-El Paso *
A brilliant, nuanced guide to cultural expertise in Latin American civil law systems. Rodriguez and the contributors ask crucial questions about the state (mis)management of cultural diversity and access to justice across a continent where anthropological experts must transcend their roles in court cases to promote social transformation.
* Ellen Moodie, Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign *
This fascinating and ground-breaking collection introduces readers to the diverse uses of anthropological expert testimony in Latin American civil law systems. Rich case studies are framed by surveys of the national legal contexts, and assessments of the dilemmas that arise when presenting cultural arguments in judicial proceedings.
* Professor Anthony Good, University of Edinburgh, UK. *
Book Information
ISBN 9781947602632
Author Leila Rodriguez
Format Paperback
Page Count 288
Imprint University of Cincinnati Press
Publisher University of Cincinnati Press
Weight(grams) 602g
Dimensions(mm) 246mm * 152mm * 29mm