Shuy | Deceptive Ambiguity by Police and Prosecutors | Buch | 978-0-19-066989-8 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 270 Seiten, Format (B × H): 161 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 573 g

Reihe: Oxford Studies in Language and Law

Shuy

Deceptive Ambiguity by Police and Prosecutors


Erscheinungsjahr 2017
ISBN: 978-0-19-066989-8
Verlag: OXFORD UNIV PR

Buch, Englisch, 270 Seiten, Format (B × H): 161 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 573 g

Reihe: Oxford Studies in Language and Law

ISBN: 978-0-19-066989-8
Verlag: OXFORD UNIV PR


Much has been written about how criminal suspects, defendants, and the targets of undercover operations employ ambiguous language as they interact with the legal system. This book examines the other side of the coin, describing fifteen criminal investigations that demonstrate how police, prosecutors, and undercover agents use deceptive ambiguity with their subjects and targets, thereby creating misrepresentations through their uses of speech events, schemas, agendas,
speech acts, lexicon, and grammar. This misrepresentation also can strongly affect the perceptions of later listeners, such as judges and juries, about the subjects' motives, predispositions, intentions, and voluntariness.
Deception is commonly considered intentional while ambiguity is often excused as unintentional, in line with Grice's maxim of sincerity in his cooperative principle. Most of the interactions of suspects, defendants, and targets with representatives of law enforcement, however, are oppositional, adversarial, and non-cooperative events that provide the opportunity for participants to stretch, ignore, or even violate the cooperative principle. One effective way law enforcement does this is by
using ambiguity. Suspects and defendants may hear such ambiguous speech and not recognize the ambiguity and therefore react in ways that they may not have understood or intended. The fifteen case studies in this book illustrate how deceptive ambiguity, whether intentional or not, is used as commonly by
police, prosecutors and undercover agents as it is by suspects and defendants.

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Autoren/Hrsg.


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Roger Shuy founded and chaired the sociolinguistics PhD program at Georgetown University, during which time he also co-founded the annual meeting of NWAV and co-founded the American Association of Applied Linguistics. He worked on some 500 criminal and civil law cases, testifying in federal and state jurisdictions as well as before the US Congress and the International Criminal Tribunal. He has published 15 books about forensic linguistics and served
as series editor of Oxford University Press series, Oxford Studies in Language and Law.



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