This article describes some of the findings of a study whose aim was to shed light upon Norway’s Workplace Interpreting Scheme (TPA), which gives deaf sign language users the right to interpretation in the workplace. The study consists of qualitative interviews with a sample of interpreters who work in the scheme in its various forms. At issue was how interpreters experience being an interpreter in these settings, with the research question: How do professional, ethical, and practical aspects of workplace interpreting influence interpreters’ reflections on questions of language and role? An earlier evaluation of the Workplace Interpreting Scheme (ECON, 2004) asked deaf and hearing users of the scheme whether they thought the scheme was an ...
More than 50 years of nondiscrimination legislation in the United States has resulted in greater div...
English version of article.In this article we consider the experience of two traditional ���amateur�...
This article focuses on how Deaf and hearing interpreters in Flanders cope with issues of power and ...
The increased participation of Deaf leaders in political, corporate, academic and other professional...
The profession of Sign Language interpreter, caught between discourses This article discusses the p...
Using a case study of a current boycott of the multi-lingual agency; Language Empire, by a significa...
The profession of Sign Language interpreting is constantly evolving alongside the changing needs of ...
This thesis explores the role of signed language interpreters (SLIs) in the workplace, a setting wh...
This article addresses the impact on occupational relations of mediated communication through a sign...
KeywordsCriminal justice, Deaf, Sign Language, Interpreting, ProfessionAbstractOver the last thirty ...
In this paper, we report on interview data collected from 14 Deaf leaders across seven countries (Au...
The article explores how the distinction between egocentric and social speech affected the dynamics ...
This article poses the existence of a relational model of interpreting that is already rooted in cul...
Döva personer i Sverige och världen lever nästan uteslutande i ett hörande majoritetssamhälle och ha...
Deaf-Hearing Interpreter teams: A Teamwork Approach Abstract Little research has been done on the pe...
More than 50 years of nondiscrimination legislation in the United States has resulted in greater div...
English version of article.In this article we consider the experience of two traditional ���amateur�...
This article focuses on how Deaf and hearing interpreters in Flanders cope with issues of power and ...
The increased participation of Deaf leaders in political, corporate, academic and other professional...
The profession of Sign Language interpreter, caught between discourses This article discusses the p...
Using a case study of a current boycott of the multi-lingual agency; Language Empire, by a significa...
The profession of Sign Language interpreting is constantly evolving alongside the changing needs of ...
This thesis explores the role of signed language interpreters (SLIs) in the workplace, a setting wh...
This article addresses the impact on occupational relations of mediated communication through a sign...
KeywordsCriminal justice, Deaf, Sign Language, Interpreting, ProfessionAbstractOver the last thirty ...
In this paper, we report on interview data collected from 14 Deaf leaders across seven countries (Au...
The article explores how the distinction between egocentric and social speech affected the dynamics ...
This article poses the existence of a relational model of interpreting that is already rooted in cul...
Döva personer i Sverige och världen lever nästan uteslutande i ett hörande majoritetssamhälle och ha...
Deaf-Hearing Interpreter teams: A Teamwork Approach Abstract Little research has been done on the pe...
More than 50 years of nondiscrimination legislation in the United States has resulted in greater div...
English version of article.In this article we consider the experience of two traditional ���amateur�...
This article focuses on how Deaf and hearing interpreters in Flanders cope with issues of power and ...