Event and Process: An Exercise in Analytical Ethnography |
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Authors: | Thomas Scheffer |
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Affiliation: | (1) SFB 447/Emmy-Noether-Group “Microsociology of Criminal Trials”, Free University Berlin, Altensteinstr 2–4, 14195 Berlin, Germany |
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Abstract: | Analytical ethnography does not presume a principal analytical frame. It does not know (yet) where and when the field takes place. Rather, the ethnographer is in search for appropriate spatiotemporal frames in correspondence with the occurrences in the field. Accordingly, the author organizes a dialogue between conceptual frames and his various empirical accounts. He confronts snapshots of English Crown Court proceedings with models of event and process from micro-sociology and macro-sociology. A range of–more or less early or late, relevant or irrelevant, contingent or predetermined–processual events serves as the vantage point to access event and process relations. In this line, Crown Court proceedings serve as an introductory and exemplary field for analytical ethnography, because they involve both: (strong) events and their process and (strong) processes and their events. |
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Keywords: | Analytical ethnography Process Event Sequential analysis Criminal case Pre-trial and trial Relevance Time |
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