Chapter 3: Storied Justice: The Narrative Strategies of US Federal Prosecutors
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Published:2019
Anna Offit, 2019. "Storied Justice: The Narrative Strategies of US Federal Prosecutors", The Emerald Handbook of Narrative Criminology, Jennifer Fleetwood, Lois Presser, Sveinung Sandberg, Thomas Ugelvik
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Abstract
This chapter demonstrates the value of ethnographic research to the study of the relationship between legal narrative and professional identity. It focuses on the ethical and professional judgements embedded in American federal prosecutors' creation and critiques of opening and closing statements. Drawing on ethnographic research, I argue that these statements revolve around the concept of ‘justice’, which prosecutors articulate, affirm and contest through the narratives of honesty and impartiality. More broadly, these conceptions of justice inform how federal prosecutors understand their identities and roles as professional legal actors. Ethnography's unique value lies in furnishing data pertaining to how trial narratives are fashioned and refined through ‘workshopping’ before these narratives are shared with jurors. The chapter thus highlights processes of narrative reflexivity and story composition.
