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To Speak as a Judge: Difference, Voice and Power by Sandra Berns
Author(s) -
Sandra Petersson
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
victoria university of wellington law review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1179-3082
pISSN - 1171-042X
DOI - 10.26686/vuwlr.v32i2.5890
Subject(s) - adjudication , power (physics) , negation , theme (computing) , postmodernism , publishing , media studies , psychology , sociology , law , linguistics , political science , literature , art , philosophy , physics , quantum mechanics , computer science , operating system
This article is a book review of Sandra Berns To Speak as Judge: Difference, Voice and Power (Ashgate, Aldershot (UK), 1999) 241 + viii pages, $180. According to Petersson, the book is a postmodern feminist exploration of the nature of adjudication and offers an observational account of judging focussed on the level of superior courts. The central theme of the book is the position of women judges and of what it means to be a woman and to speak as a judge, and to speak as a woman in a world in which woman remains a negation. 

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