Publications
Filipovic, Luna. 2019. Evidence-gathering in police interviews. Communication problems and possible solutions. Pragmatics and Society 10 (1) : 9–31.
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.
Pablos-Ortega, Carlos de. 2019. “Would it be fair to say that you actively sought out material?” Mitigation and aggravation in police investigative interviews. Pragmatics and Society 10 (1) : 49–71.
Pounds, Gabrina. 2019. Rapport-building in suspects’ police interviews. The role of empathy and face. Pragmatics and Society 10 (1) : 95–121.
Wilson, Lauren and Dave Walsh. 2019. Striving for impartiality. Conflicts of role, trust and emotion in interpreter-assisted police interviews. Pragmatics and Society 10 (1) : 122–151.
Watson, Danielle. 2014. Defining power margins: a classification of power within the discourses of police and civilian in a crime ‘hotspot community’ in Northern Trinidad. Journal of multicultural discourses 9 (3) : 227–250.
Wyse, Marion. 2014. Developing a method for cross-cultural dialogue with Chinese: A report on the process. Language and Dialogue 4 (3) : 404–424.
Braun, Sabine. 2013. Keep your distance? Remote interpreting in legal proceedings: A critical assessment of a growing practice. Interpreting 15 (2) : 200–228.
Stokoe, Elizabeth H. 2010. ‘I’m not gonna hit a lady’: Conversation analysis, membership categorization and men’s denials of violence towards women. Discourse & Society 21 (1) : 59–82.
Stokoe, Elizabeth H. 2009. “I’ve got a girlfriend”: Police officers doing ‘self-disclosure’ in their interrogations of suspects. Narrative Inquiry 19 (1) : 154–182.
Josselson, Ruthellen. 2004. The hermeneutics of faith and the hermeneutics of suspicion. Narrative Inquiry 14 (1) : 1–28.