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Table of Contents
Articles
Quantifying evidence in forensic authorship analysis | PDF Untitled |
Tim Grant | 1-25 |
Taboo terms in a sexual abuse criminal trial | |
Burns Cooper | 27-50 |
The pragmatic use of gender in Latina women's legal narratives of abuse | |
Shonna Trinch | 51-83 |
Linguistic Manipulations in Legal Discourse: Framing questions and ‘smuggling’ information* | |
Michelle Aldridge , June Luchjenbroers | 85-107 |
Non-contemporary speech samples: auditory detectability of an 11 year delay and itseffect on automatic speaker identification | |
Hermann J. Künzel | 109-136 |
Commentaries/Responses
Thesis Abstracts
Forensic automatic speaker recognition using Bayesian interpretation and statistical compensation for mismatched conditions | |
Anil Alexander | 145-147 |
‘Speak English or what?’ Codeswitching and interpreter use in New York Small Claims Courts | |
Philipp Sebastian Angermeyer | 147-150 |
Examining jurors’ discursive exchanges related to mitigating factors during capital jury deliberations | |
Desiree Cassar | 150-154 |
An acoustic study on disguised voices | |
Cuiling Zhang | 154-156 |
Book Reviews
Diana Yankova (2004) Legal Language Made Simple: Statutory Provisions in English and Bulgarian | |
Bilyana Martinovski | 157-160 |
Book Announcements
Christopher Williams, Tradition and Change in Legal English: VerbalConstructions in Prescriptive Texts.Bern: Peter Lang. ISBN 3–03910–644–9 (paperback) | |
Chris Heffer | 161 |
Katrijn Maryns, The Asylum Speaker: Language in the Belgian Asylum Procedure.Manchester: St. Jerome Publishing. ISBN 1–900650–89–4 (paperback) | |
Chris Heffer | 161 |
Sanford Schane, Language and the LawLondon: Continuum. ISBN 0–8264–8828–5 (hardback) | |
Chris Heffer | 162 |
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