Elizabeth Mertz
Elizabeth Mertz is a linguistic and legal anthropologist who is also a law professor at the University of Wisconsin Law School, where she teaches family law courses. She has been on the research faculty of the American Bar Foundation since 1989. She has a PhD in Anthropology from Duke University and a JD from Northwestern University. Her early research focused on language, identity and politics in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, and her dissertation dealt with language shift in Cape Breton Scottish Gaelic, drawing on semiotic anthropology. Her later research examines the language of U.S. legal education in detail using linguistic anthropological approaches. She writes on semiotics, anthropology, and law, among other topics. She has been editor of Law & Social Inquiry and of PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review.Personal
She is the daughter of the late Barbara Mertz.Publications
- 2007. The Language of Law School: Learning to 'Think Like a Lawyer.
- 2007. Law In Action: A Socio-Legal Reader.
- 2002. Ethnography in Unstable Places: Everyday Lives in Contexts of Dramatic Political Change.
- 1992. "Language, law and social meanings: linguistic anthropological contributions to the study of law." Law & Society Review 26:413-445.
- 1985. Semiotic Mediation: Sociocultural and Psychological Perspectives.