The Routledge Handbook of Forensic Linguistics (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Coulthard, Malcolm; Sousa-Silva, Rui; May, Alison
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The Routledge Handbook of Forensic Linguistics (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Coulthard, Malcolm; Sousa-Silva, Rui; May, Alison
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This handbook offers a comprehensive survey of the subdiscipline of Forensic Linguistics, with this new edition providing updated overviews from leading figures in the field and exciting new contributions. It is a vital resource for advanced students, researchers and scholars.
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- Größe: 118.55MB
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This handbook offers a comprehensive survey of the subdiscipline of Forensic Linguistics, with this new edition providing updated overviews from leading figures in the field and exciting new contributions. It is a vital resource for advanced students, researchers and scholars.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 760
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. November 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780429641428
- Artikelnr.: 60338823
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 760
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. November 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780429641428
- Artikelnr.: 60338823
Malcolm Coulthard is Emeritus Professor of Forensic Linguistics at Aston University, UK. He was Foundation President of the International Association of Forensic Linguists and founding co-editor of the International Journal of Speech, Language and the Law (IJSLL) and is co-editor of the international journal Language and Law/Linguagem e Direito. Alison May (formerly Johnson) is Lecturer in English Language at the University of Leeds, UK. She is co-author of An Introduction to Forensic Linguistics: Language in Evidence, 2nd edn. (with Malcolm Coulthard and David Wright, Routledge, 2017) and co-editor of the International Journal of Speech, Language and the Law. Rui Sousa-Silva is Assistant Professor and researcher of the Faculty of Arts and Humanities of the University of Porto, Portugal. He is Publicity Officer of the International Association of Forensic Linguists and co-editor of the international journal Language and Law/Linguagem e Direito .
List of illustrations
List of conventions used
List of contributors and affiliations
Notes on editors and contributors
Acknowledgements
1 Introduction
Section I The language of the law and the legal process
1.1 Legal language and legal meaning
2 Legal talk
3 Legal writing: complexity
4 Legal writing: attitude and emphasis
5 Creating multilingual law
6 Legal interpretation
1.2 Witnesses and suspects in interviews and investigations
7 Miranda rights
8 Witnesses and suspects in interviews
9 False confessors
10 Police interviews in the judicial process
11 Assuming identities online
1.3 Language in the courtroom
12 Order in court
13 Narrative in the trial
14 Advances in studies of the historical courtroom
15 Capitally speaking: language and bias in capital trials
16 Multimodality in legal interaction
1.4 Lay participants in the judicial process
17 Instructions to jurors
18 Vulnerable witnesses
19 Rape victims
20 Defendants' allocutions at sentencing
21 Aboriginal claimants
Section II The linguist as expert in the legal process
2.1 Expert and process
22 The forensic linguist
23 Trademark linguistics
24 Speaker profiling and forensic voice comparison
25 Forensic phonetics and automatic speaker recognition
26 Forensic transcription
27 Consumer product warnings
28 Terrorism and forensic linguistics
2.2 Multilingualism in legal contexts
29 Non-native speakers in detention
30 Court interpreting
31 Interpreting outside the courtroom
2.3 Authorship and opinion
32 Experts and opinions
33 Forensic stylistics
34 Text messaging forensics
35 Plagiarism
36 Computational forensic linguistics
Section III New directions
37 Corpus approaches to forensic linguistics
38 Corpora and legal interpretation
39 Police crisis negotiation
40 Investigative linguistics
41 'Prison has been a proper punishment'
42 Pranksters, provocateurs, propagandists
43 Concluding remarks
Index
List of conventions used
List of contributors and affiliations
Notes on editors and contributors
Acknowledgements
1 Introduction
Section I The language of the law and the legal process
1.1 Legal language and legal meaning
2 Legal talk
3 Legal writing: complexity
4 Legal writing: attitude and emphasis
5 Creating multilingual law
6 Legal interpretation
1.2 Witnesses and suspects in interviews and investigations
7 Miranda rights
8 Witnesses and suspects in interviews
9 False confessors
10 Police interviews in the judicial process
11 Assuming identities online
1.3 Language in the courtroom
12 Order in court
13 Narrative in the trial
14 Advances in studies of the historical courtroom
15 Capitally speaking: language and bias in capital trials
16 Multimodality in legal interaction
1.4 Lay participants in the judicial process
17 Instructions to jurors
18 Vulnerable witnesses
19 Rape victims
20 Defendants' allocutions at sentencing
21 Aboriginal claimants
Section II The linguist as expert in the legal process
2.1 Expert and process
22 The forensic linguist
23 Trademark linguistics
24 Speaker profiling and forensic voice comparison
25 Forensic phonetics and automatic speaker recognition
26 Forensic transcription
27 Consumer product warnings
28 Terrorism and forensic linguistics
2.2 Multilingualism in legal contexts
29 Non-native speakers in detention
30 Court interpreting
31 Interpreting outside the courtroom
2.3 Authorship and opinion
32 Experts and opinions
33 Forensic stylistics
34 Text messaging forensics
35 Plagiarism
36 Computational forensic linguistics
Section III New directions
37 Corpus approaches to forensic linguistics
38 Corpora and legal interpretation
39 Police crisis negotiation
40 Investigative linguistics
41 'Prison has been a proper punishment'
42 Pranksters, provocateurs, propagandists
43 Concluding remarks
Index
List of illustrations
List of conventions used
List of contributors and affiliations
Notes on editors and contributors
Acknowledgements
1 Introduction
Section I The language of the law and the legal process
1.1 Legal language and legal meaning
2 Legal talk
3 Legal writing: complexity
4 Legal writing: attitude and emphasis
5 Creating multilingual law
6 Legal interpretation
1.2 Witnesses and suspects in interviews and investigations
7 Miranda rights
8 Witnesses and suspects in interviews
9 False confessors
10 Police interviews in the judicial process
11 Assuming identities online
1.3 Language in the courtroom
12 Order in court
13 Narrative in the trial
14 Advances in studies of the historical courtroom
15 Capitally speaking: language and bias in capital trials
16 Multimodality in legal interaction
1.4 Lay participants in the judicial process
17 Instructions to jurors
18 Vulnerable witnesses
19 Rape victims
20 Defendants' allocutions at sentencing
21 Aboriginal claimants
Section II The linguist as expert in the legal process
2.1 Expert and process
22 The forensic linguist
23 Trademark linguistics
24 Speaker profiling and forensic voice comparison
25 Forensic phonetics and automatic speaker recognition
26 Forensic transcription
27 Consumer product warnings
28 Terrorism and forensic linguistics
2.2 Multilingualism in legal contexts
29 Non-native speakers in detention
30 Court interpreting
31 Interpreting outside the courtroom
2.3 Authorship and opinion
32 Experts and opinions
33 Forensic stylistics
34 Text messaging forensics
35 Plagiarism
36 Computational forensic linguistics
Section III New directions
37 Corpus approaches to forensic linguistics
38 Corpora and legal interpretation
39 Police crisis negotiation
40 Investigative linguistics
41 'Prison has been a proper punishment'
42 Pranksters, provocateurs, propagandists
43 Concluding remarks
Index
List of conventions used
List of contributors and affiliations
Notes on editors and contributors
Acknowledgements
1 Introduction
Section I The language of the law and the legal process
1.1 Legal language and legal meaning
2 Legal talk
3 Legal writing: complexity
4 Legal writing: attitude and emphasis
5 Creating multilingual law
6 Legal interpretation
1.2 Witnesses and suspects in interviews and investigations
7 Miranda rights
8 Witnesses and suspects in interviews
9 False confessors
10 Police interviews in the judicial process
11 Assuming identities online
1.3 Language in the courtroom
12 Order in court
13 Narrative in the trial
14 Advances in studies of the historical courtroom
15 Capitally speaking: language and bias in capital trials
16 Multimodality in legal interaction
1.4 Lay participants in the judicial process
17 Instructions to jurors
18 Vulnerable witnesses
19 Rape victims
20 Defendants' allocutions at sentencing
21 Aboriginal claimants
Section II The linguist as expert in the legal process
2.1 Expert and process
22 The forensic linguist
23 Trademark linguistics
24 Speaker profiling and forensic voice comparison
25 Forensic phonetics and automatic speaker recognition
26 Forensic transcription
27 Consumer product warnings
28 Terrorism and forensic linguistics
2.2 Multilingualism in legal contexts
29 Non-native speakers in detention
30 Court interpreting
31 Interpreting outside the courtroom
2.3 Authorship and opinion
32 Experts and opinions
33 Forensic stylistics
34 Text messaging forensics
35 Plagiarism
36 Computational forensic linguistics
Section III New directions
37 Corpus approaches to forensic linguistics
38 Corpora and legal interpretation
39 Police crisis negotiation
40 Investigative linguistics
41 'Prison has been a proper punishment'
42 Pranksters, provocateurs, propagandists
43 Concluding remarks
Index