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Unearthing bureaucratic legal consciousness: government officials' legal identification and moral ideals

Abstract

The legal consciousness of citizens receiving the law has been extensively explored but little attention has been paid to the legal consciousness of individuals applying the law. This paper draws on interviews with forty government officials in the Refugee Review Tribunal of Australia to address this concern, analysing how government bureaucrats think about law. In doing so, it identifies a series of underlying ideals informing the officials’ legal identification narratives. It presents a heuristic that positions bureaucratic legal identification in relation to broader moral ideals, demonstrating that as government officials’ identification with law increases so too does their idealisation of intellect and information processing. Conversely, as the officials’ identification with law decreases, their idealisation of experience and truth verification increases. These findings provide new insights into how law works in government, revealing bureaucratic legal identification as structured according to broader moral values, and thereby unearthing legal consciousness’ latent metacognitive dimension.

Acceptance Date Sep 1, 2015
Publication Date Sep 1, 2015
Publicly Available Date Mar 28, 2024
Journal International Journal of Law in Context
Print ISSN 1744-5523
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 299-319
DOI https://doi.org/10.1017/S1744552315000166
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.1017/S1744552315000166

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