This brief response to Ordinary Meaning and Corpus Linguistics, an article by Stefan Gries and Brian Slocum, explains why corpus linguistics represents a radical break from current statutory interpretation practice, and it argues that corpus linguistics ought not be adopted as an interpretive theory for criminal laws. Corpus linguistics has superficial appeal because it promises to increase predictability and to decrease the role of judges’ personal preferences in statutory interpretation. But there are reasons to doubt that corpus linguistics can achieve these goals. More importantly, corpus linguistics sacrifices other, more important values, including notice and accountability
Courts and scholars disagree about the quantum of evidence that is necessary to determine the meanin...
In Part I, I discuss the reasons why corpus linguistics should not be considered in isolation from c...
Scholarship is increasingly devoted to improving the “accuracy” of statutory interpretations, but ac...
This brief response to Ordinary Meaning and Corpus Linguistics, an article by Stefan Gries and Brian...
Legal writers have recently turned to corpus linguistics to interpret legal texts. Corpus linguistic...
This Article discusses how corpus analysis, and similar empirically based methods of language study,...
During the last 5–10 years, corpus-linguistic applications have slowly become more widespread in mat...
Most any approach to interpretation of the language of law begins with a search for ordinary meaning...
Scholars and judges have heralded corpus linguistics—the study of language through collections of sp...
Rarely is a new yardstick of legal meaning created. But over the past decade, corpus linguistics has...
While corpus linguistics has existed since the 1960s, Forensic Linguistics is a relatively new disc...
In this paper, we set out to explore conditions in which the use of large linguistic corpora can be ...
The nascent field of law and corpus linguistics has much to offer legal interpretation. But to do so...
Judges and lawyers often appeal to the “ordinary meaning” of the words in legal texts. Until very re...
Corpus linguistics is more than just a new tool for legal interpretation. Work in corpus linguistics...
Courts and scholars disagree about the quantum of evidence that is necessary to determine the meanin...
In Part I, I discuss the reasons why corpus linguistics should not be considered in isolation from c...
Scholarship is increasingly devoted to improving the “accuracy” of statutory interpretations, but ac...
This brief response to Ordinary Meaning and Corpus Linguistics, an article by Stefan Gries and Brian...
Legal writers have recently turned to corpus linguistics to interpret legal texts. Corpus linguistic...
This Article discusses how corpus analysis, and similar empirically based methods of language study,...
During the last 5–10 years, corpus-linguistic applications have slowly become more widespread in mat...
Most any approach to interpretation of the language of law begins with a search for ordinary meaning...
Scholars and judges have heralded corpus linguistics—the study of language through collections of sp...
Rarely is a new yardstick of legal meaning created. But over the past decade, corpus linguistics has...
While corpus linguistics has existed since the 1960s, Forensic Linguistics is a relatively new disc...
In this paper, we set out to explore conditions in which the use of large linguistic corpora can be ...
The nascent field of law and corpus linguistics has much to offer legal interpretation. But to do so...
Judges and lawyers often appeal to the “ordinary meaning” of the words in legal texts. Until very re...
Corpus linguistics is more than just a new tool for legal interpretation. Work in corpus linguistics...
Courts and scholars disagree about the quantum of evidence that is necessary to determine the meanin...
In Part I, I discuss the reasons why corpus linguistics should not be considered in isolation from c...
Scholarship is increasingly devoted to improving the “accuracy” of statutory interpretations, but ac...