The Archival Turn in Law: The Papers of Lindy Chamberlain in the National Library of Australia

Sydney Law Review, vol 36, no 3, pp. 277-301

26 Pages Posted: 18 Jul 2018

See all articles by Katherine Biber

Katherine Biber

University of Technology Sydney, Faculty of Law

Date Written: June 26, 2018

Abstract

Lindy Chamberlain is the victim of Australia's most notorious miscarriage of justice; in 1982 she was wrongly convicted of the murder of her baby daughter, Azaria. In the decades following her exoneration, Lindy Chamberlain-Creighton, as she is now known, came to an arrangement with the National Library of Australia to care for the papers she had accumulated as a result of her daughter's death and the legal processes that followed. This article examines the 'Chamberlain Papers' through the lens of materiality and scholarship associated with the 'archival turn' in the humanities, social sciences and information sciences. This approach affords an understanding of documents as objects, artefacts and technologies. Working materially with documents provides new opportunities for legal scholars to understand files, papers, recordkeeping and bureaucracy, and gives legal significance to papers created outside the law.

Keywords: Documents, archives, criminal trials, Azaria Chamberlain, Lindy Chamberlain

Suggested Citation

Biber, Katherine, The Archival Turn in Law: The Papers of Lindy Chamberlain in the National Library of Australia (June 26, 2018). Sydney Law Review, vol 36, no 3, pp. 277-301, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3203161

Katherine Biber (Contact Author)

University of Technology Sydney, Faculty of Law ( email )

Sydney
Australia

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