Publications
Filipovic, Luna. 2019. Evidence-gathering in police interviews. Communication problems and possible solutions. Pragmatics and Society 10 (1) : 9–31.
Hijazo-Gascón, Alberto. 2019. Translating accurately or sounding natural? The interpreters’ challenges due to semantic typology and the interpreting process. Pragmatics and Society 10 (1) : 72–94.
Musolff, Andreas. 2019. “You keep telling us different things, what do we believe?” Meta-communication and meta-representation in police interviews. Pragmatics and Society 10 (1) : 32–48.
Pounds, Gabrina. 2019. Rapport-building in suspects’ police interviews. The role of empathy and face. Pragmatics and Society 10 (1) : 95–121.
Walsh, Dave and Lauren Wilson. 2019. Striving for impartiality. Conflicts of role, trust and emotion in interpreter-assisted police interviews. Pragmatics and Society 10 (1) : 122–151.
Aina, Oluwasola A., Anthony E. Anowu and Tunde Olusola Opeibi. 2018. The nature of power and control in the interrogative patterns of selected Nigerian courtroom discourse . In Kryk-Kastovsky, Barbara and Dennis Kurzon, eds. Legal Pragmatics. (Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 288). John Benjamins. pp. 133–156.
Gaines, Philip. 2018. Presupposition as investigator certainty in a police interrogation: The case of Lorenzo Montoya’s false confession. Discourse & Society 29 (4) : 399–419.
Saeed, Neveen al-. 2018. The language of Egyptian interrogations: A study of suspects’ resistance to implicatures and presuppositions in prosecution questions . In Kryk-Kastovsky, Barbara and Dennis Kurzon, eds. Legal Pragmatics. (Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 288). John Benjamins. pp. 157–179.
Cerović, Marijana. 2016. When suspects ask questions: Rhetorical questions as a challenging device. Journal of Pragmatics 105 : 18–38.
Stommel, Wyke and Guusje Jol. 2016. Ethical considerations of secondary data use. What about informed consent? Dutch Journal of Applied Linguistics 5 (2) : 180–195.
Stewart, Catherine, Stacey Hannem and Debra Langan. 2016. Deconstructing Accounts of Intimate Partner Violence: Doing Interviews, Identities, and Neoliberalism. Applied Linguistics 37 (2) : 219–238.
MacLeod, Nicci. 2016. “I thought I’d be safe there”: Pre-empting blame in the talk of women reporting rape. Journal of Pragmatics 96 : 96–109.
Mason, Marianne. 2016. The ‘preparatory’ and ‘argumentation’ stages of police interrogation: A linguistic analysis of a criminal investigation. Language & Communication 48 : 79–87.
Sliedrecht, Keun Young, Fleur van der Houwen and Marca Schasfoort. 2016. Challenging formulations in police interrogations and job interviews: A comparative study. Journal of Pragmatics 105 : 114–129.
Carter, Elisabeth. 2014. Forensic linguistics. In Östman, Jan-Ola and Jef Verschueren, eds. Handbook of Pragmatics. 2014 Installment. (Handbook of Pragmatics 18). John Benjamins. pp. 01–20.
Charldorp, Tessa Van. 2014. “What happened?” From talk to text in police interrogations. Language & Communication 36 : 7–24.
Pfenninger, Simone E. 2014. Quadrilingual advantages: do-support in bilingual vs. multilingual learners. The International Journal of Multilingualism 11 (2) : 143–163.
Charldorp, Tessa Van. 2013. The intertwining of talk and technology: How talk and typing are combined in the various phases of the police interrogation. Discourse & Communication 7 (2) : 221–240.
Haworth, Kate. 2013. Audience design in the police interview: The interactional and judicial consequences of audience orientation. Language in Society 42 (1) : 45–69.
Komter, Martha. 2012. The career of a suspect’s statement: Talk, text, context. Discourse Studies 14 (6) : 731–752.