Social media in legal practice

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Social media in legal practice

edited by Vijay Bhatia and Girolamo Tessuto

(Law, language and communication / series editors, Anne Wagner, Vijay Kumar Bhatia)

Routledge, 2021

  • : hbk

Available at  / 1 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

There are multiple aspects of electronically-mediated communication that influence and have strong implications for legal practice. This volume focuses on three major aspects of mediated communication through social media. Part I examines social media and the legal community. It explores how this has influenced professional legal discourse and practice, contributing to the popularity of internet-based legal research, counselling and assistance through online services offering explanations of law, preparing documents, providing evidence, and even encouraging electronically mediated alternative dispute resolution. Part II looks at the use of social media for client empowerment. It examines how it has taken legal practice from a formal and distinct business to one that is publicly informative and accessible. Part III discusses the way forward, exploring the opportunities and challenges. Based on cases from legal practice in diverse jurisdictions, the book highlights key issues as well as implications for legal practitioners on the one hand, and clients on the other. The book will be a valuable reference for international scholars in law and other socio-legal studies, discourse analysis, and practitioners in legal and alternative dispute resolution contexts.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • SECTION 1: SOCIAL MEDIA AND THE LEGAL COMMUNITY
  • Environmental justice or 'government overreach': the rhetorical landscape of the Gibson guitar factory raids
  • Trial by (social) media: Anglo-Saxon and Italian practises in the digital age
  • Legally dead, illegally frozen? The legal aspects of cryonics as discursively constructed online by providers and the media
  • The fuzzy line between media and judicial discourse: insights from the Pinto-Lopez Madrid Case
  • Ideological positioning in Amnesty International human rights web-based documents
  • Argumentation and video evidence in a legal context: an interdisciplinary case study from Brazilian military justice
  • SECTION 2: SOCIAL MEDIA FOR CLIENT EMPOWERMENT
  • The discursive construction of Hong Kong's Civic Square in the media: contesting social and legal perspectives
  • Finding a way forward: a discourse analysis of the online popularisation of restorative justice in the United Kingdom
  • Helping Aussie women online: a discourse analysis of the Australian e-safety commissioner website
  • Discursive illusions and manipulations in legal blogs on medically assisted procreation: Parrillo v. Italy Case
  • Jag 2.0: legal advice and dissemination in online military lawyer forums
  • The web-mediated construction of interdiscursive truth(s) about the MMR vaccine: a defamation case
  • SECTION 3: CHALLENGES AND WAY FORWARD
  • The toxic proliferation of lies and fake news in the world of social media: is it time for the law to "unfriend" Facebook?
  • 'Fake news' as interdiscursive illusion: a challenge to law, social media, and free speech
  • Information and communication technology in alternative dispute resolution: is it facilitative or disruptive?

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