
@article{ref1,
title="On the boundary of the material world: Two cases of legal recognition in Taiwan",
journal="Travailler",
year="2014",
author="Chen, H.-h.",
volume="31",
number="1",
pages="89-117",
abstract="This article traces detailed history of two seminal cases that have brought Taiwan's Occupational Safety and Health establishment to recognize psychiatric disorder as an occupational disease, and work-related suicide as occupational hazard. In examining these cases, this article tries to apply a less-often used theoretical perspective of &quot;visual culture&quot; to discuss a broader scientific-political infrastructure in contemporary society. Using &quot;visual culture&quot; as a political concept is especially useful in understanding some seemingly odd norms and practices prevailing in the civil-law tradition in Taiwanese judicial system. This makes social/legal/scientific controversies play out in very different ways, comparing to those in the common-law countries in which most of the previous social studies of science-law interface have been done.<p /><p>Language: fr</p>",
language="fr",
issn="1620-5340",
doi="10.3917/trav.031.0089",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/trav.031.0089"
}