In this article I conduct an examination of discursive identity of a legal ‘object’ in the course of its treatment by various figures in the legal process. The need for this examination arises from a widespread concern about the effects of creating ‘records’, i.e., transforming spoken discourse by way of documentation into ‘evidence’. After a brief review of the current discussion about this phenomenon, I argue that the identity of textualized evidence is upheld by way of references to other texts, all of which create a field of signification within which an object under discussion (evidence) shows different facets without however losing its identity. In order to support my argument, I offer an analysis of ethnographic data pertaining to a ...
This article addresses a serious, but currently unacknowledged, problem of evidential consistency re...
This chapter provides an introduction to police-suspect interview discourse, focusing on its role as...
For forty years linguists have talked about idiolect and the uniqueness of individual utterances. Th...
The article deals with a fundamental mechanism here referred to as 'discoursivation' meaning the tra...
Criminal trial hearings are communicative events that are densely intertextually structured. In the ...
textIn this paper, I argue that legal authorities assign speaking power to objects and evidence in t...
In the following discourse analysis, I crisscross the realms of text and talk to follow the microfor...
Abstract: The words “reason”, “cause” and “evidence” are frequently used throughout with premise of ...
The language of the law has been a favourite subject of investigation for both legal professionals a...
This paper investigates the issue of professional identity in legal research articles by focussing o...
A poet and an appellate criminal defence attorney specialising in sex crimes, Vanessa Place reproduc...
Over the past thirty years or so, theoretical work in such fields as legal semiotics and law and lit...
The paper aims to explore documentary evidence in legal discourse from a socio-semiotic perspective ...
We focus on a striking difference between prototypical legal discourse format and a complex multimod...
There is a distinction between commonly known truth and truth as established for legal purposes. The...
This article addresses a serious, but currently unacknowledged, problem of evidential consistency re...
This chapter provides an introduction to police-suspect interview discourse, focusing on its role as...
For forty years linguists have talked about idiolect and the uniqueness of individual utterances. Th...
The article deals with a fundamental mechanism here referred to as 'discoursivation' meaning the tra...
Criminal trial hearings are communicative events that are densely intertextually structured. In the ...
textIn this paper, I argue that legal authorities assign speaking power to objects and evidence in t...
In the following discourse analysis, I crisscross the realms of text and talk to follow the microfor...
Abstract: The words “reason”, “cause” and “evidence” are frequently used throughout with premise of ...
The language of the law has been a favourite subject of investigation for both legal professionals a...
This paper investigates the issue of professional identity in legal research articles by focussing o...
A poet and an appellate criminal defence attorney specialising in sex crimes, Vanessa Place reproduc...
Over the past thirty years or so, theoretical work in such fields as legal semiotics and law and lit...
The paper aims to explore documentary evidence in legal discourse from a socio-semiotic perspective ...
We focus on a striking difference between prototypical legal discourse format and a complex multimod...
There is a distinction between commonly known truth and truth as established for legal purposes. The...
This article addresses a serious, but currently unacknowledged, problem of evidential consistency re...
This chapter provides an introduction to police-suspect interview discourse, focusing on its role as...
For forty years linguists have talked about idiolect and the uniqueness of individual utterances. Th...