Narrative expressivism: A criminological approach to the expressive function of international criminal justice

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Abstract

In response to recent demands to make use of international criminal justice institutions’ archives for social scientific research, this article develops a theoretical approach to international criminal justice called narrative expressivism. Narrative expressivism considers criminal justice as a potent source of information about past crimes – yet also, as a site that impacts on present and future societal understandings of mass violence, promoting a particular structuring of thought. As such, narrative expressivism addresses what kind of knowledge international criminal justice, its institutions and archives, provide the empirical basis for. Theorizing expressivism through a narrative lens, narrative expressivism shifts the emphasis of legal expressivist approaches from facts to stories, from punishment to process, from purpose to function, and from the normative to the descriptive.

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Bringedal Houge, A. (2019). Narrative expressivism: A criminological approach to the expressive function of international criminal justice. Criminology and Criminal Justice, 19(3), 277–293. https://doi.org/10.1177/1748895818787009

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