@article{3c2728a12a994d32825932e639fc6f2e,
title = "Justice suspended: Rethinking institutions, regimentation, and channels from a human rights law perspective",
abstract = "This article analyzes institutions as sites for political and social change by looking beyond regimentation and fixedness as the central discursive features of institutionalization. Drawing on research at the European Court of Human Rights—one of the world's most extensive human rights courts—I analyze how human rights actors redeploy normative institutional logics through creative approaches to institutional categories. I argue that lawyers and advocates working within the Court and Convention system naturalize and fix boundaries of law and politics and use that distinction to activate an excess of potential meanings and intertextual connections in legal judgments. This involves using institutional affordances to keep cases open and structure collaborative waiting. These strategies allow people to mutually inhabit open-ended relationships to texts in intentional ways. In so doing, lawyers and activists defer resolving legal judgments—until new coalitions take political power, there are generational shifts in attitudes or shifts in geopolitical power arrangements that render state actors subject to diplomatic pressure. Analyzing how people improvise, learn, and teach others to manage institutional channels and excess opens up the black box of institutionality as a site for social transformation.",
keywords = "human rights law, institutions, legal semiotics, regimentation",
author = "Greenberg, {Jessica R.}",
note = "Sincere thanks to Justin Richland and Courtney Handman for generously providing comments on an earlier draft of this manuscript. I am also indebted to ongoing conversations about language, power, and institutions with Jillian Cavanaugh, Hilary Dick, Alejandro Paz, Jonathan Rosa, and Shalini Shankar beginning with a 2016 AAA Panel, From a Back Row: Processes of institutionalization and the institutionalization of life. I am grateful for financial support for this research from the Fulbright Scholars Program, France and the Commission Franco\u2010Am\u00E9ricaine and the National Science Foundation (Law and Science Division) under award #1824026\u2014Strategies of Influence and Persuasion in Legal Networks. The contents and views expressed here are solely the responsibility of the author and do not necessarily represent official views of either program or their sponsoring government agencies. Sincere thanks to Justin Richland and Courtney Handman for generously providing comments on an earlier draft of this manuscript. I am also indebted to ongoing conversations about language, power, and institutions with Jillian Cavanaugh, Hilary Dick, Alejandro Paz, Jonathan Rosa, and Shalini Shankar beginning with a 2016 AAA Panel, From a Back Row: Processes of institutionalization and the institutionalization of life. I am grateful for financial support for this research from the Fulbright Scholars Program, France and the Commission Franco-Am\u00E9ricaine and the National Science Foundation (Law and Science Division) under award #1824026\u2014Strategies of Influence and Persuasion in Legal Networks. The contents and views expressed here are solely the responsibility of the author and do not necessarily represent official views of either program or their sponsoring government agencies.",
year = "2024",
month = may,
doi = "10.1111/jola.12415",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "34",
pages = "45--65",
journal = "Journal of Linguistic Anthropology",
issn = "1055-1360",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "1",
}