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Critical legal anthropology
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An approach within legal anthropology that examines how law and judicial systems serve to amintain and expand dominant power interests rather than protecting marginal and less powerful people.
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Social control
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Processes that maintain orderly social life, including informal and formal mechanisms.
-Culturally defined rules and ways to ensure that people follow the rules. |
Norm
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A generally agreed-upon standard for how people should behave, usually unwritten and learned unconsciously.
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Law
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A binding rule created through enactment or custom that deifnes rig ht and reasonable behavior and its enforceable by threat of punishment.
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Resolution
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Try to get her to come back, if she won't, then let her go.
(if broken norm or law) |
Policing
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The exercise of social control through processes of surveillance and the threat of punishment related to maintaing social order.
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Trial by ordeal
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A way of determining innocence or guilt in which the accused person is put to a test that may be painful, stressful, or fatal.
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Legal pluralism
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A situation in w hich more than one way exists of defining acceptable and unacceptable beahvior and ways to deal with the latter.
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Banditry
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A form of aggressive conflict that involves socially patterned theft, usually practiced by a person or group of persons who are socially marginal and who may gain a mythic status.
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Feuding
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Long-term retributive violence that may be lethal between families, groups of families, or tribes.
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Revolution
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A political crisis prompted by illegal and often violent actions of subordinate groups that seek to chagne the political institutions or social structure of a society.
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War
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Organized and purposeful group action directed against another group and involving lethal force.
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Critical military anthropology
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The study of military as a power structure in terms of its roles and interal social dynamics.
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Study of policing in Japan
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Low crime rate.
-Neighborhood police boxes and foot patrol. Volunteer crime prevention groups. High expectations of no false arrests. High rate of confession: police have more power than suspects. |
Prisons and Death penalty
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The presions, as a place where people are forcibly detained as form of punishment.
-The US imprisons more people than any other country in the world by China. |