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Making academic work advocacy work: Technologies of power in the public arena

  • Amy Propen
  • , Mary Lay Schuster

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Through interviews and courtroom observations in a case study done in collaboration with a community partner in two judicial districts in Minnesota, the authors extend the scholarly conversation about critical, activist research in business and technical communication and make pedagogical suggestions by studying two groups who contribute to the discourse about victim rights: judges who accept plea negotiations and make sentencing decisions and advocates who help victims contribute, through victim impact statements, their reactions as crime victims and their requests for certain punishments and conditions for the crime perpetrators. The authors identify the technologies of power used by each group to assert their disciplinary authority and trace how these assertions play out in the courtroom. They conclude that by capitalizing on the normative structures of impact statements, advocates may actually give victims more power. Such activist research might benefit research participants and enhance research methods.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)299-329
Number of pages31
JournalJournal of Business and Technical Communication
Volume22
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2008

Keywords

  • Advocacy work and research approaches
  • Community research partners
  • Interpreters of the public sphere
  • Judges and advocates
  • Normative structures in the courtroom
  • Victim impact statements

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