References
Ainsworth, Janet
2012 “The Meaning of Silence in the right to remain silent.” In The Oxford Handbook of Language and Law, ed. by Peter Tiersma and Lawrence Solan, 287–298. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Arendholz, Jenny, Wolfram Bublitz and Monika Kirner-Ludwig
(eds) 2015The Pragmatics of Quoting Now and Then. Berlin: de Gruyter. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Brendel, Elke, Markus Steinbach and Jörg Meibauer
(eds.) 2011Understanding Quotation. Linguistic and Philosophical Analyses. Berlin: de Gruyter Mouton. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Brown, Penelope and Stephen C. Levinson
1987Politeness: Some universals in Language Use. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Bublitz, Wolfram
2015 “Introducing Quoting as a Ubiquitous Meta-Communicative Act.” In The Pragmatics of Quoting Now and Then, ed. by Jenny Arendholz, Wolfram Bublitz and Monika Kirner-Ludwig, 1–26. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
College of Policing
2017Investigative Interviewing. [URL] (accessed 04/12/2017)
Cotterill, Janet
2004 “ ‘Just One More Time …’: Aspects of Intertextuality in the Trials of O. J. Simpson.” In Language in the legal process, ed. by Janet Cotterill, 147–161. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
2005 “You do not have to say anything…: Instructing the jury on the defendant’s right to silence in the English criminal justice system.” Multilingua: Special issue on Silence in Institutional and Intercultural Contexts 24(1/2): 7–24. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Coulthard, Malcolm
1977An Introduction to Discourse Analysis. London: Longman.Google Scholar
2004 “Whose Voice Is It? Invented and Concealed Dialogue in Written Records of Verbal Evidence Produced by the Police.” In Language in the legal process, ed. by Janet Cotterill, 19–34. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Dando, Coral, Rachel Wilcock and Rebecca Milne
2009 “The Cognitive interview: novice police officers’ witness/victim interviewing practices.” Psychology, Crime and Law 15(8): 679–696. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Gibbons, John
2003Forensic Linguistics: an introduction to language in the justice system. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
gov.uk
2017aPolice and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 (PACE) codes of practice; updated 25 October 2017; [URL] (accessed 04/12/2017)
gov.uk
2017bBeing arrested: your rights; [URL] (accessed 04/12/2017)
Grice, Herbert Paul
1989 “Logic and Conversation.” In: Herbert Paul Grice 1989 Studies in the Way of Words, 22–40. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Hübler, Axel and Wolfram Bublitz
2007 “Introducing metapragmatics in use.” In Metapragmatics in Use, ed. by Wolfram Bublitz and Axel Hübler, 1–26. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
2013 “Embedding police interviews in the prosecution case in the Shipman trial.” In Legal-Lay Communication. Textual Travels in the Law, ed. by C. Heffer, F. Rock, and J. Conley, 147–167. Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Johnson, Alison
2014 “ ‘Dr Shipman told you that…’ The organising and synthesising power of quotation in judicial summing-up.” Language and Communication 36 (1): 53–67. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Matoesian, Greg
2000 “Intertextual authority in reported speech: Production media in the Kennedy Smith rape trial.” Journal of Pragmatics 32: 879–914. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Newbury, Philipp and Alison Johnson
2006 “Suspects’ resistance to constraining and coercive questioning strategies in the police interview.” The International Journal of Speech Language and the Law 13 (2): 213–240.Google Scholar
Oxburgh, Gavin E., Trond Myklebust and Tim Grant
2010 “The question of question types in police interviews: A review of the literature from a psychological and linguistic perspective.” The International Journal of Speech Language and the Law 17 (1): 45–66. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Poggi, Francesca and Alessandro Capone
(eds.) 2016Pragmatics and Law: Philosophical Perspectives. New York: Springer.Google Scholar
(eds.) 2017Pragmatics and Law: Practical and Theoretical Perspectives. New York: Springer. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Rock, Frances
2012 “The caution in England and Wales.” In The Oxford Handbook of Language and Law, ed. by Peter Tiersma and Lawrence Solan, 313–325. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Schiffrin, Deborah
2001 “Discourse Markers: Language, Meaning and Context.” In The Handbook of Discourse Analysis, ed. by Deborah Schiffrin, Deborah Tannen and Heidi E. Hamilton, 55–75. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Scollon, Ronald, Suzanne Wong Scollon, and Rodney H. Jones
2012Intercultural Communication: A Discourse Approach. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.Google Scholar
TACIT
2018Translation and Communication in Training. Norwich: University of East Anglia. [URL]
Vredeveldt, Annelies, Peter J. van Koppen and Pär Anders Granhag
2014 “The Inconsistent Suspect: A systematic review of different Types of consistency in truth tellers and liars.” In Investigative Interviewing, ed. by Ray Bull, 183–208. New York: Springer Science. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Walsh, David and Ray Bull
2012 “Examining rapport in investigative interviews with suspects: Does its building and maintenance work?Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology 27: 73–84. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
2015 “Interviewing suspects: examining the association between skills, questioning, evidence disclosure, and interview outcomes.” Psychology, Crime & Law 21 (7): 661–680. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Wilson, Deirdre
2000 “Metarepresentation in Linguistic Communication.” In Metaprepresentations: a multidisciplinary perspective, ed. by Dan Sperber, 411–448. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar