Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 April 2020
This is an introduction to a scholarly forum that is an outcome of the workshop entitled Cultural Expertise in Ancient and Modern History held in Oxford in July 2018 and aims to make explicit the interdisciplinary components of cultural expertise from a historiographical perspective in order to open up the discussion to the history of law.
She thanks the Chief Editor and the reviewers of the Law and History Journal for hosting this forum on Cultural Expertise and Law in Ancient and Modern History, which is a primary output of Cultural Expertise in Europe: What is it useful for?, project led by Livia Holden and funded by the European Research Council.
1. Holden, Livia, “Introduction: Reflexivity, Culture and Ethics,” in Cultural Expertise and Litigation: Patterns, Conflicts, Narratives, ed. Holden, Livia (New York: Routledge, 2011), 2CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
2. Holden, Livia, “Cultural Expertise and Socio-Legal Studies: Introduction,” and “Beyond Cultural Expert Witnessing: Toward an Integrated Definition of Cultural Expertise,” in Cultural Expertise and Socio-Legal Studies: Special Issue, ed. Holden, Livia (New York: Emerald Publishing, 2019), 1–12Google Scholar, 181–200.
3. Duve, Thomas, “Global Legal History: Setting Europe in Perspective,” in The Oxford Handbook of European Legal History, ed. Pihlajamaki, Heikki, Dubber, Markus D., and Godfrey, Mark (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018)Google Scholar.
4. Whittle, Andrea and Wilson, Jason, “Ethnomethodology and the Production of History: Studying ‘history-in-action,’” Business History 57 (2015): 1–23CrossRefGoogle Scholar.