Legal Actuation

Thu, 6/6: 12:45 PM - 2:30 PM
2681 
Paper Session 
Hyatt Regency Denver at Colorado Convention Center 
Room: Mineral G 

Proposal

Individuals routinely engage in instrumental transactional legal behavior, from generating tax returns to signing leases to negotiating employment terms. While some individuals undertake these activities equipped with the skills, knowledge, and capacity to behave strategically, others do not. In this article, we introduce the concept of legal actuation to describe this legal behavior and theorize its role as a source of inequality under the law. Using estate planning as an empirical example, we consider how variation in legal actuation may serve to reproduce economic inequalities and investigate the role of legal socialization, knowledge, and capability as mechanisms of advantage. In doing so, we draw attention to an understudied dimension of everyday legal behavior that has important implications for equal justice and the relationship between law and inequality. 

Presenter

Emily Taylor Poppe, University of California, Irvine School of Law  - Contact Me

Non-Presenting Co-Author

Megan Bea, University of Wisconsin-Madison  - Contact Me
Email All Contacts