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Title Law and lies : deception and truth-telling in the American legal system / edited by Austin Sarat (Amherst College)
Published New York : Cambridge University Press, 2015

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Description 1 online resource
Contents Law and lies: an introduction / Austin Sarat with Haley Cambra, Sarah Smith, and Olivia Truax -- 1. Where the law lies: constitutional fictions and their discontents / Mary Anne Franks -- 2. The artifice of advocacy: perjury and participation in the American adversary system / Norman W. Spaulding -- 3. Lies to manipulate, misappropriate, and acquire governmental power / Helen Norton -- 4. Lies, rape, and statutory rape / Stuart P. Green -- 5. Law and the production of deceit / William N. Eskridge, Jr -- Afterword: law, lies, and law schools / Montré D. Carodine
Summary "Law has a strangely complicated relationship to deception. Though it sometimes takes a hard line on behalf of truth - 'the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth' - competing values often cause law to look the other way. How and why is lying alternately accepted, condemned, or prosecuted? What are the government's interests in allowing or disallowing lying? Law and Lies is the first book to thematically address the role of lying in the American legal system. Undercover police agents are permitted to lie in the name of catching criminals, and government officials are permitted to lie in service of national security. In the case of the military's 'Don't ask, don't tell' policy, lying was not only permitted, but actively encouraged. A range of illuminating case studies reveal that the government's tolerance of deception is rarely as simple as the 'whole truth'"-- Provided by publisherpages
"Deception and Truth-Telling in the American Legal System Law has a strangely complicated relationship to deception. Though it sometimes takes a hard line on behalf of truth - "the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, "--Competing values often cause law to look the other way. How and why is lying alternately accepted, condemned, or prosecuted? What are the government's interests in allowing or disallowing lying? Law and Lies is the first book to thematically address the role of lying in the American legal system. Undercover police agents are permitted to lie in the name of catching criminals, and government officials are permitted to lie in service of national security. In the case of the military's "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy, lying was not only permitted, but actively encouraged. A range of illuminating case studies reveal that the government's tolerance of deception is rarely as simple as the "whole truth.""-- Provided by publisherpages
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Deception -- United States
Fraud -- United States
Torts -- United States
Truthfulness and falsehood -- United States
LAW -- General.
LAW -- Administrative Law & Regulatory Practice.
Deception
Fraud
Torts
Truthfulness and falsehood
United States
Form Electronic book
Author Sarat, Austin, editor.
ISBN 9781316374979
1316374971
9781316258293
1316258297