Year 1958-1961

Scope and content :

1958-1961. The first field work trip of Moerman in Thailand. He spent almost 3 years to collected field data about the Lue society, tradition, culture, and daily life of Tai Lue community at Ban Phaed, Payao province. 3295 records of slide, photograph, punch card, letter, notebook, typescript, and map.

Repository : SAC

Extent and medium : 3295 records of slide, photograph, punch card, letter, notebook, typescript, and map.

Immediate source of acquisition or transfer : Donated by Michael Moerman, 2005.

System of arrangemant : The series is divided base on the periods of field work in Thailand.

Condition governing accessible and reproduce : Some restriction on access. To respect in intellectual property right, the original material (hard copy) may not allowed to access. Please contact staff if you need more information.

Creative Commons License : Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs (CC BY-NC-ND)

Traditional Knowledge License : Traditional Knowledge Attribution Non-Commercial (TK A-NC)

Language : English/Thai

Script : English/Thai

Rule or convention : Collection, series and file level description based on ISAD(G)

641. Reference : MM-1-21-78

Perelman

| Moerman refers to Perelman’s work (1963) on the meaning of arguments, noting that propositions can be understood from earlier discussions. | Punch card

Perelman

642. Reference : MM-1-21-79

Perelman

| Moerman refers to Perelman’s work (1958) on the issue of basic philosophy and the relationship between the essence and its manifestation, giving the example of the relationship between a person and his actions. | Punch card

Perelman

643. Reference : MM-1-21-80

Llewellyn

| Moerman refers to Llewellyn’s work (1960) on the issue of court confidentiality, and casts doubt on the rationality of Llewellyn’s argument that secrecy is difficult to enforce as each person is different. | Punch card

Llewellyn

644. Reference : MM-1-21-81

Llewellyn

| Moerman cites Llewellyn’s work (1960) on Cheyenne law, noting that rather than being decisive, Cheyenne law is flexible and dependent on situation, relying both on customary law and the immediate context. | Punch card

Llewellyn

645. Reference : MM-1-21-82

Llewellyn

| Moerman cites Llewellyn’s work (1960) on the withdrawal of court cases. | Punch card

Llewellyn

646. Reference : MM-1-21-83

Williams

| Moerman refers to Williams' work (1945) on the issue of court trials, noting that judgments cannot clearly delineate between ‘black’ and ‘white’. | Punch card

Williams

647. Reference : MM-1-21-84

| Moerman asks how those who attend a trial envisage the court. For the Swedish, the salient feature of the court is the litigants, but for the British it is the barristers and for the French the legal technicians. | Punch card

648. Reference : MM-1-21-85

Wetter

| Moerman refers to Wetter’s work (1960) on ‘The current opinions of the Supreme Court of Arkansas: A Study in Craftsmanship’ by the Arkansas Justice George Rose Smith, concerning the habit of lawyers to engage in repetition in order to emphasize what is said. | Punch card

Wetter

649. Reference : MM-1-21-86

Ruesch and Bateson

| Moerman refers to Ruesch and Bateson (1951) on values that depend on such things as ethics, performance, or achievements, and the recognition of those values. | Punch card

Ruesch and Bateson

650. Reference : MM-1-21-87

Black

| Moerman refers to Black’s work (1965) on the abstract norm. Black cites examples from his experience of being arrested by police officers. | Punch card

Black