Elizabeth Mertz
Elizabeth Mertz is a linguistic and legal anthropologist who is also a law professor at the University of Wisconsin Law School, where she teaches family law courses. She has been on the research faculty of the American Bar Foundation since 1989. She has a PhD in Anthropology from Duke University (where she studied with Virginia R. Domínguez and William O'Barr) and a JD from Northwestern University (where she was the John Paul Stevens scholar and a Wigmore Scholar). Her early research focused on language, identity and politics in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, and her dissertation dealt with language shift in Cape Breton Scottish Gaelic, drawing on semiotic anthropology.Her later research examines the language of U.S. legal education in detail using linguistic anthropological approaches (see her book ''The Language of Law School'').
She writes on semiotics, anthropology, and law, among other topics. She has been editor of ''Law & Social Inquiry'' and of ''PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review''. Provided by Wikipedia
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1by Terry Fulmer, Rita A. Jablonski, Elizabeth Mertz, Mary George, Stefanie RussellGet full text
Published 2012-01-01
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2by Joanna Mullins, Alfa Yansane, Shwetha V. Kumar, Suhasini Bangar, Ana Neumann, Todd R. Johnson, Gregory W. Olson, Krishna Kumar Kookal, Emily Sedlock, Aram Kim, Elizabeth Mertz, Ryan Brandon, Kristen Simmons, Joel M. White, Elsbeth Kalenderian, Muhammad F. WaljiGet full text
Published 2021-05-01
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