Until 2010, North Carolina’s courts, which promise “equal justice to all,” had no resources to accommodate the needs of all non-English speakers. They had to sign English-only forms they could not read and were expected find interpreters they could not pay for to explain a crime of which they had never been informed. Over the past five years, this incomprehensible state of language access has improved, thanks to the cooperation of judges, lawyers, advocacy groups, and the courts. In this project, I explore language access in North Carolina courts. I spent seventy-five hours observing in two North Carolina courthouses, one small and rural and one large and urban. During my time, I met and interviewed 13 non-English speakers whose stories di...
PresentationIn the course of its rapid economic growth and radical social changes, China has experie...
As the rapid growth of immigrant communities in recent years transforms the demography of the United...
AbstractThis paper focuses on the constitutional rights of limited-English-proficiency suspects in t...
One of the most important rights enshrined in the American Constitution is the right to due process ...
Court interpreters have seldom been featured in studies on the criminal courts. Until recently, case...
The authors of this Comment contend that the communications problems of non-English-speaking indigen...
The main objective of this study is to determine the impact of immigration interpreters on the testi...
Since the 1960s, the United States government has paid increasing attention to the rights of languag...
Individuals have different linguistic competence in using the ‘standard’/official language(s) set by...
Because statutory exceptions in California law allow trial courts to appoint non-certified interpret...
This article analyzes the legal field’s apparent lack of interest in interpreter-related problems as...
A federal law, the Court Interpreters Act, provides litigants with complimentary access to a qualifi...
The dissertation addresses the privatization of communication-based labor in public services. The li...
In Oregon, requests for court interpreters of languages indigenous to Latin America have increased w...
Against the backdrop of the globalised new economy and increasing movement of people across national...
PresentationIn the course of its rapid economic growth and radical social changes, China has experie...
As the rapid growth of immigrant communities in recent years transforms the demography of the United...
AbstractThis paper focuses on the constitutional rights of limited-English-proficiency suspects in t...
One of the most important rights enshrined in the American Constitution is the right to due process ...
Court interpreters have seldom been featured in studies on the criminal courts. Until recently, case...
The authors of this Comment contend that the communications problems of non-English-speaking indigen...
The main objective of this study is to determine the impact of immigration interpreters on the testi...
Since the 1960s, the United States government has paid increasing attention to the rights of languag...
Individuals have different linguistic competence in using the ‘standard’/official language(s) set by...
Because statutory exceptions in California law allow trial courts to appoint non-certified interpret...
This article analyzes the legal field’s apparent lack of interest in interpreter-related problems as...
A federal law, the Court Interpreters Act, provides litigants with complimentary access to a qualifi...
The dissertation addresses the privatization of communication-based labor in public services. The li...
In Oregon, requests for court interpreters of languages indigenous to Latin America have increased w...
Against the backdrop of the globalised new economy and increasing movement of people across national...
PresentationIn the course of its rapid economic growth and radical social changes, China has experie...
As the rapid growth of immigrant communities in recent years transforms the demography of the United...
AbstractThis paper focuses on the constitutional rights of limited-English-proficiency suspects in t...