By far the most testy moments of the conference arose out of the following problem. The Supreme Court had interpreted knowingly in a criminal statute regulating interstate commerce of child pornography to cover the age of participants, even though the placement of knowingly in the statutory provision would, according to standard usages of English grammar, lead to its not being applied to that element of the crime.! All participants at our conference fairly quickly acknowledged the following two truths: (1) the Court\u27s construction did not fit ordinary English grammar, and (2) there might be appropriate (legal) reasons why statutory construction of a criminal statute would assign knowingly a force exceeding that indicated by ordinar...
According to a view that founds wide support in philosophy of language and linguistics, the full lin...
Language plays an essential role both in creating law and in governing its implementation. Providing...
Ever since Foucault, it has become an academic cliché to speak of discursively created disciplinary ...
By far the most testy moments of the conference arose out of the following problem. The Supreme Cour...
Without fanfare, Plain Meaning and Hard Cases relegated its discussion of phonetics, phonology, and ...
What can lawyers learn from linguistics? Here are some thoughts, focused on statutory interpretation
Law and linguistics ought to be natural partners. Modem statutory and constitutional interpretation\...
Law and linguistics ought to be natural partners. Modem statutory and constitutional interpretation ...
First, I will discuss certain limits in the potential relevance of linguistic theory to legal analys...
In this article, I explore some of the truths on each side of the issue of whether the language of t...
I would like to take a closer look here at how linguists and lawyers look at language (sentences) an...
In this Article, I want to take the heretical position that linguists\u27 principal expertise-ascert...
Because much of modern philosophy has been preoccupied with some form of language analysis and becau...
The jacket of Professor Peter Tiersma’s book Legal Language illustrates the problem inherent in a li...
Language plays an essential role both in creating law and in governing its implementation. Providing...
According to a view that founds wide support in philosophy of language and linguistics, the full lin...
Language plays an essential role both in creating law and in governing its implementation. Providing...
Ever since Foucault, it has become an academic cliché to speak of discursively created disciplinary ...
By far the most testy moments of the conference arose out of the following problem. The Supreme Cour...
Without fanfare, Plain Meaning and Hard Cases relegated its discussion of phonetics, phonology, and ...
What can lawyers learn from linguistics? Here are some thoughts, focused on statutory interpretation
Law and linguistics ought to be natural partners. Modem statutory and constitutional interpretation\...
Law and linguistics ought to be natural partners. Modem statutory and constitutional interpretation ...
First, I will discuss certain limits in the potential relevance of linguistic theory to legal analys...
In this article, I explore some of the truths on each side of the issue of whether the language of t...
I would like to take a closer look here at how linguists and lawyers look at language (sentences) an...
In this Article, I want to take the heretical position that linguists\u27 principal expertise-ascert...
Because much of modern philosophy has been preoccupied with some form of language analysis and becau...
The jacket of Professor Peter Tiersma’s book Legal Language illustrates the problem inherent in a li...
Language plays an essential role both in creating law and in governing its implementation. Providing...
According to a view that founds wide support in philosophy of language and linguistics, the full lin...
Language plays an essential role both in creating law and in governing its implementation. Providing...
Ever since Foucault, it has become an academic cliché to speak of discursively created disciplinary ...