Introduction Section 1: The Language of the Law and the Legal Process Section 2: The Linguist as Expert in Legal Processes Section 3: New Debates and New Directions
"This book is a theory-building contribution to forensic
linguistics, valuable to scholars, practitioners and researchers in
any of the areas of study of language and law: legal language, the
language of the court and the judicial process, and language as
evidence. Comprehensive, with many real data-driven examples, and
full of methodological questions and answers; it deals with both
the present dimensions and the new perspectives and challenges of
this emerging discipline."
-M. Teresa Turell, Universitat Pompeu Fabra (Barcelona)"A major
strength of this handbook is the vast academic and professional
background of all of these contributors; this volume will certainly
advance dialogue not just between linguists, but also among judges,
court recorders and interpreters, lawyers,
police, and other members of law enforcement. This collaboration
will bolster
new ideas and hybrid methodologies for future work in Forensic
Linguistic analysis."
- Christopher D. Sams, Department of English, Stephen F. Austin
State University
This book is a theory-building contribution to forensic
linguistics, valuable to scholars, practitioners and researchers in
any of the areas of study of language and law: legal language, the
language of the court and the judicial process, and language as
evidence. Comprehensive, with many real data-driven examples, and
full of methodological questions and answers; it deals with both
the present dimensions and the new perspectives and challenges of
this emerging discipline.M. Teresa Turell, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
(Barcelona)'... the editors have done a masterful job in providing
the needed broad coverage in forensic linguistics, and helped the
reader to draw connections and to cross-reference between the
variety of papers presented.' - Australian Review of Applied
Linguistics
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |