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The criminal trial as a live event: Exploring how and why live blogs change the professional practices of judges, defence lawyers and prosecutors

Flower, Lisa LU orcid and Ahlefeldt, Marie-Sophie (2021) In Media, Culture and Society 43(8). p.1480-1496
Abstract
Live blogging from legal trials has become one of the most accessible ways in which the public can gain direct insight into legal proceedings, particularly in countries where television cameras are denied entry into the courtroom. Whilst live blogging constitutes an important way of ensuring the transparency and openness of legal processes and documents – a principle known as open justice and a key component of many democratic societies – the risks stemming from opening up the courts not only to more immediate and detailed scrutiny, but also to a larger, virtual audience are lesser known. A deeper understanding of how a legal trial’s transformation into a live event due to live blogs has impacted on the legal sphere is therefore needed.... (More)
Live blogging from legal trials has become one of the most accessible ways in which the public can gain direct insight into legal proceedings, particularly in countries where television cameras are denied entry into the courtroom. Whilst live blogging constitutes an important way of ensuring the transparency and openness of legal processes and documents – a principle known as open justice and a key component of many democratic societies – the risks stemming from opening up the courts not only to more immediate and detailed scrutiny, but also to a larger, virtual audience are lesser known. A deeper understanding of how a legal trial’s transformation into a live event due to live blogs has impacted on the legal sphere is therefore needed. The aims of this article are thus twofold: to show how live blogs are changing legal professionals’ work practices and to discuss what it is about live blogs that leads to these changes in professional practices. The analysis draws on qualitative interviews with legal professionals in Sweden and Denmark and finds that live blogs increase reflection in professional performances stemming from an awareness of performing to a virtual audience. Surveillance thus leads to performance adjustment. Live blogs also lead to changes in professionals practices and transform the audience/participant boundary into a fluid one most notably regarding the Danish respondents in comparison to those in Sweden. The article also suggests a hierarchy of liveness with live blogs considered to be less intrusive than televised trials. (Less)
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author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
courtroom, criminal trial, virtual audience, legal professionals, live blog, hierarchy of liveness, publicness, surveillance, synopticism
in
Media, Culture and Society
volume
43
issue
8
pages
1480 - 1496
publisher
SAGE Publications
external identifiers
  • scopus:85111542785
ISSN
1460-3675
DOI
10.1177/01634437211022730
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
dc2e61b9-e36e-4a05-b159-6f848c35bea5
date added to LUP
2021-08-03 13:57:13
date last changed
2023-11-30 15:42:47
@article{dc2e61b9-e36e-4a05-b159-6f848c35bea5,
  abstract     = {{Live blogging from legal trials has become one of the most accessible ways in which the public can gain direct insight into legal proceedings, particularly in countries where television cameras are denied entry into the courtroom. Whilst live blogging constitutes an important way of ensuring the transparency and openness of legal processes and documents – a principle known as open justice and a key component of many democratic societies – the risks stemming from opening up the courts not only to more immediate and detailed scrutiny, but also to a larger, virtual audience are lesser known. A deeper understanding of how a legal trial’s transformation into a live event due to live blogs has impacted on the legal sphere is therefore needed. The aims of this article are thus twofold: to show how live blogs are changing legal professionals’ work practices and to discuss what it is about live blogs that leads to these changes in professional practices. The analysis draws on qualitative interviews with legal professionals in Sweden and Denmark and finds that live blogs increase reflection in professional performances stemming from an awareness of performing to a virtual audience. Surveillance thus leads to performance adjustment. Live blogs also lead to changes in professionals practices and transform the audience/participant boundary into a fluid one most notably regarding the Danish respondents in comparison to those in Sweden. The article also suggests a hierarchy of liveness with live blogs considered to be less intrusive than televised trials.}},
  author       = {{Flower, Lisa and Ahlefeldt, Marie-Sophie}},
  issn         = {{1460-3675}},
  keywords     = {{courtroom; criminal trial; virtual audience; legal professionals; live blog; hierarchy of liveness; publicness; surveillance; synopticism}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{8}},
  pages        = {{1480--1496}},
  publisher    = {{SAGE Publications}},
  series       = {{Media, Culture and Society}},
  title        = {{The criminal trial as a live event: Exploring how and why live blogs change the professional practices of judges, defence lawyers and prosecutors}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/139657482/Flower_Ahlefeldt.pdf}},
  doi          = {{10.1177/01634437211022730}},
  volume       = {{43}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}