<p>"An empirically rich and thoroughly argued call for anthropological modesty in its engagement with law, but at the same time also shows the value of a distinctly ethnographic contribution to the study of legal processes."<br /><em>Dr Tobias Kelly ,Senior Lecturer,Organisation Social Anthropology, School of Social and Political Studies, University of Edinburgh</em></p>
<p>"An empirically rich and thoroughly argued call for anthropological modesty in its engagement with law, but at the same time also shows the value of a distinctly ethnographic contribution to the study of legal processes."<br /><em>Dr Tobias Kelly ,Senior Lecturer,Organisation Social Anthropology, School of Social and Political Studies, University of Edinburgh</em> </p>
Offering an analysis of asylum processes in UK courts, this study of asylum as an aspect of globalization focuses on the role of anthropologists as expert witnesses and compares the use of social, scientific and medical evidence in decision-making.
Prologue. Tales of Persecution. Asylum as a Social and Political Problem. Anthropologists and Lawyers. Studying Asylum. Convention Refugees: An Anthropological Approach. Claiming Asylum. Expert Evidence. Assessing Credibility. Weighing the Evidence. Reaching Decisions. Risk, Authority and Expertise.