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When Law and Medicine Meet: A Cultural View
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Main description:

What happens when two systems, law and medicine, are joined in the arena of the court? This work deals with the structure and the premises of two diverse discourse models; the approach is anthropological.


Several chapters are preponderantly based on legal research, addressing cases requiring testimony by expert witnesses on recent technologies used in the laboratories of medical scientists. Descriptions of other societies and cultures consider the identical problems of rights, privileges, and duties, and provide perspectives to cultural self-knowledge.


This volume can be used as a text for courses taught in medical schools and law schools. It will be of particular interest to students taking courses in health science, public health, medical anthropology, forensic anthropology, psychology, sociology, public justice, behavioral sciences, forensic psychiatry, legal anthropology, social welfare, as well as courses on research models.


Feature:

Details cases that require testimony by expert witnesses on recent technologies used in the laboratories of medical scientists


Provides descriptions of other societies and cultures that consider the identical problems of rights, privileges, and duties


Draws on cultural, historical and contemporary examples


Back cover:

What happens when two systems, law and medicine, are joined in the arena of the court? This work deals with the structure and the premises of two diverse discourse models; the approach is anthropological.


Several chapters are preponderantly based on legal research, addressing cases requiring testimony by expert witnesses on recent technologies used in the laboratories of medical scientists. Descriptions of other societies and cultures consider the identical problems of rights, privileges, and duties, and provide perspectives to cultural self-knowledge.


This volume can be used as a text for courses taught in medical schools and law schools. It will be of particular interest to students taking courses in health science, public health, medical anthropology, forensic anthropology, psychology, sociology, public justice, behavioral sciences, forensic psychiatry, legal anthropology, social welfare, as well as courses on research models.


 


"This book illuminates our path through the largely uncharted terrain of two diverse systems of reasoning, law and medicine, as they interact in the courts. Through cultural, historical and contemporary examples such as the O.J. Simpson case, it leads us to a new way of knowing."


Igor Grant, Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry and Director of the HIV Neurobehavioral Research Center, University of California, San Diego



"Provides a critical framework for considering science as ‘truth’ and illustrates the political nature of legal functioning. It will enlighten the intelligent lay person and reward the expert as it provides compressed moments of historical and cultural analyses that would make a fine novelist proud".


Leonard V. Kaplan, Mortimer Jackson Professor of Law, University of Wisconsin



"A ground-breaking and original contribution which transcends the isolation between medical and legal thought systems. Refreshingly free of jargon, this is medical anthropology at its most thoughtful and practical, and should be required reading wherever doctors, lawyers and medical anthropologists are trained".


Ivan Brady, Distinguished Teaching Professor and Chair, Department of Anthropology, State University of New York (Oswego)



"The O.J. Simpson trial is particularly gripping. Science in the laboratory is contrasted with "forensic science", and the epistemology of perception and ideological interpretations are also insightfully discussed. An excellent and well-written book.


Hugo G. Nutini, University Professor of Anthropology, University of Pittsburgh



 


Contents:

From the contents:
Prologue.
Chapter one. Primitive Yet Contemporary: Matrices of Meaning.
Chapter two. The Shape of Believing.
Chapter three. From Myth to Law.
Chapter four. The Romance of Science and Medicine.
Chapter five. The Science of Commitment.
Chapter six. Criminal Behavior and Brian Imaging Techno-Science.
Chapter seven. DNA Fingerprinting.
Chapter eight. Notes from the Trial of the Century.
Chapter nine. Logics of Discovery, Chance, and Scientific Evidence in the Court.
Appendix. Bibliography. Index.


PRODUCT DETAILS

ISBN-13: 9781402067631
Publisher: Springer (Springer Netherlands)
Publication date: November, 2007
Pages: 204
Weight: 650g
Availability: Not available (reason unspecified)
Subcategories: General Practice, Public Health
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CUSTOMER REVIEWS

Average Rating 

"At times difficult scientific and legal concepts are discussed in an entirely clear, accessible way - in an engaging even-paced writing style."

"The O.J. Simpson trial is particularly gripping; going beyond an analysis of assessing scientific methods in a court of law, the authors insightfully discuss ideological interpretations that 'facts' and perceptions engender in terms of race, class, and ethnicity."

"The authors are accomplished professionals who have spent a lifetime studying and practicing the subjects they address and who have reached in surrounding disciplines to take and make connections for all concerned. This is medical anthropology at its most thoughtful and practical."