ABSTRACT

There are multiple aspects of electronically-mediated communication that influence and have strong implications for legal practice. This volume focuses on three major aspects of mediated communication through social media. Part I examines social media and the legal community. It explores how this has influenced professional legal discourse and practice, contributing to the popularity of internet-based legal research, counselling and assistance through online services offering explanations of law, preparing documents, providing evidence, and even encouraging electronically mediated alternative dispute resolution. Part II looks at the use of social media for client empowerment. It examines how it has taken legal practice from a formal and distinct business to one that is publicly informative and accessible. Part III discusses the way forward, exploring the opportunities and challenges. Based on cases from legal practice in diverse jurisdictions, the book highlights key issues as well as implications for legal practitioners on the one hand, and clients on the other.

The book will be a valuable reference for international scholars in law and other socio-legal studies, discourse analysis, and practitioners in legal and alternative dispute resolution contexts.

part |89 pages

Section 1 - Social media and the legal community

chapter 1|15 pages

Environmental justice or “government overreach”

The rhetorical landscape of the Gibson guitar factory raids

chapter 2|13 pages

Trial by (social) media

Anglo-Saxon and Italian practices in the digital age

chapter 4|16 pages

The fuzzy line between media and judicial discourse

Insights from the Pinto-López Madrid Case

chapter 6|12 pages

Argumentation and video evidence in a legal context

A multidisciplinary case study from Brazilian military justice

part |106 pages

Section 2 - Social media for client empowerment

chapter 7|19 pages

The discursive construction of Hong Kong’s Civic Square in the media

Contesting social and legal perspectives

chapter 8|18 pages

Finding a way forward

A discourse analysis of the online popularization of restorative justice in the United Kingdom

chapter 9|16 pages

Helping Aussie women online

A discourse analysis of the Australian eSafety Commissioner website

chapter 11|17 pages

Jag 2.0

Legal advice and dissemination in online military lawyer forums

part |47 pages

Section 3 - Challenges and way forward

chapter 13|15 pages

The toxic proliferation of lies and fake news in the world of social media

Is it time for the law to “unfriend” Facebook?

chapter 14|17 pages

“Fake news” as interdiscursive illusion

A challenge to law, social media, and free speech

chapter 15|13 pages

Information and communication technology in alternative dispute resolution

Is it facilitative or disruptive?