In this article we analyze how prosecutors, lawyers and judges refer to the case file. Because witnesses are rarely heard again in Dutch criminal court, understanding how their written voices are re-animated in court is of importance. Lawyers and prosecutors select quotations and introduce these in a written (to be spoken) statement and control the sequential embedding. Judges introduce quotations while examining the evidence; the introduction of quotations is hence contingent on the developing interaction with the suspect. We examine one trial and show how referrals to the case file by the different professionals are selected to construct versions of the events and how their sequential embedding contributes to achieving these different ver...
Witness testimony in a trial is a first-person narrative (Olsson 2004) or sub-narrative (Tiersma 199...
This case study explores the impact of the court interpreter on the defendant’s « discursive ethos »...
The leading questions from which the present study originates could be summarised as follows: How do...
In this article we analyze how prosecutors, lawyers and judges refer to the case file. Because witne...
This paper examines how "reported writing" is sequentially embedded in Dutch criminal trials. In the...
Closing arguments in Dutch trials are representative of the adversarial part of the Dutch criminal j...
Criminal trial hearings are communicative events that are densely intertextually structured. In the ...
none1noUsing the conversation analytic methodology, the paper analyses how “direct reported speech”...
International audienceIn this article, I analyze the talk between a suspect and a prosecutor during ...
Since 2005, Dutch victims of serious crime have the right to make an oral statement in court (‘spree...
What suspects tell the police may become a crucial piece of evidence when the case comes to court. B...
The importance of language in the study of courtroom trials has been comprehensively investigated fr...
© The Author(s) 2018. The expressive function of victim impact statements (VISs) enables victims to ...
The expressive function of victim impact statements (VISs) enables victims to have a voice in legal ...
The pupose is to study stories about crime, mythopoesis, via the modalities of speech, text and imag...
Witness testimony in a trial is a first-person narrative (Olsson 2004) or sub-narrative (Tiersma 199...
This case study explores the impact of the court interpreter on the defendant’s « discursive ethos »...
The leading questions from which the present study originates could be summarised as follows: How do...
In this article we analyze how prosecutors, lawyers and judges refer to the case file. Because witne...
This paper examines how "reported writing" is sequentially embedded in Dutch criminal trials. In the...
Closing arguments in Dutch trials are representative of the adversarial part of the Dutch criminal j...
Criminal trial hearings are communicative events that are densely intertextually structured. In the ...
none1noUsing the conversation analytic methodology, the paper analyses how “direct reported speech”...
International audienceIn this article, I analyze the talk between a suspect and a prosecutor during ...
Since 2005, Dutch victims of serious crime have the right to make an oral statement in court (‘spree...
What suspects tell the police may become a crucial piece of evidence when the case comes to court. B...
The importance of language in the study of courtroom trials has been comprehensively investigated fr...
© The Author(s) 2018. The expressive function of victim impact statements (VISs) enables victims to ...
The expressive function of victim impact statements (VISs) enables victims to have a voice in legal ...
The pupose is to study stories about crime, mythopoesis, via the modalities of speech, text and imag...
Witness testimony in a trial is a first-person narrative (Olsson 2004) or sub-narrative (Tiersma 199...
This case study explores the impact of the court interpreter on the defendant’s « discursive ethos »...
The leading questions from which the present study originates could be summarised as follows: How do...