Social Protest and the Absence of Legalistic Discourse: In the Quest for New Language of Dissent

International Journal for the Semiotics of Law, 2014, DOI 10.1007/s11196-014-9378-5

22 Pages Posted: 3 Nov 2014 Last revised: 20 Dec 2014

See all articles by Shulamit Almog

Shulamit Almog

University of Haifa - Faculty of Law

Gad Barzilai

University of Haifa; University of Washington - Henry. M. Jackson School of International Studies, Societies and Justice Program

Multiple version iconThere are 2 versions of this paper

Date Written: March 14, 2014

Abstract

Legalistic discourse, lawyers and lawyering had minor representation during the 2011 summer protest events in Israel. In this paper we explore and analyze this phenomena by employing content analysis on various primary and secondary sources, among them structured personal interviews with leaders and major activists involved in the protest, flyers, video recordings made by demonstrators and songs written by them. Our findings show that participants cumulatively produced a pyramid-like structure of social power that is anchored in the enterprise of organizing the protest. Our findings explicate how the non-legalistic and even anti-legalistic discourse of the protest was formed, shaped and generated within the power relations of the protest, and how a pyramid of power produced a new poetics of protest that rejected the traditional poetics of state law. The power relations that generated the discourse regarding state law were embedded in socioeconomic stratification along the divide of center and periphery in Israel.

Keywords: Social protest and law, Legal poetics, Pyramid of power relation

Suggested Citation

Almog, Shulamit and Barzilai, Gad, Social Protest and the Absence of Legalistic Discourse: In the Quest for New Language of Dissent (March 14, 2014). International Journal for the Semiotics of Law, 2014, DOI 10.1007/s11196-014-9378-5, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2517995 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2517995

Shulamit Almog (Contact Author)

University of Haifa - Faculty of Law ( email )

Mount Carmel
Haifa, 31905
Israel

Gad Barzilai

University of Haifa ( email )

Mount Carmel
Haifa, 31905
Israel

University of Washington - Henry. M. Jackson School of International Studies, Societies and Justice Program ( email )

Seattle, WA
United States
206- 353 3169 (Phone)

HOME PAGE: http://faculty.washington.edu/gbarzil/

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