Methodologies and Challenges in Forensic Linguistic Casework
Wiley Series in The Psychology of Crime, Policing and Law
1. Edition April 2022
192 Pages, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
Methodologies and Challenges in Forensic Linguistic Casework
Discover more about Forensic Linguistics, a fascinating cross-disciplinary field from an international team of renowned contributors
Methodologies and Challenges in Forensic Linguistic Casework provides an overview of the range of forensic linguistic casework typically found in investigative and judicial contexts. In these case studies, the authors demonstrate how linguistic theory is applied in real-life forensic situations and the constraints and challenges they have to deal with. Drawing on linguistic expertise from the USA and Europe involving casework in English, Spanish, Danish and Portuguese, our contributing practitioners exemplify the most common types of text analysis such as identifying faked texts, suspect profiling, analyzing texts whose authorship is questioned, and giving expert opinions on meaning and understanding.
Methodologies and Challenges in Forensic Linguistic Casework is designed for investigators and legal practitioners interested in the use of language analysis for investigative or evidentiary purposes, as well as for students and researchers wanting to understand how linguistic theory and analysis may be applied to solving real-life forensic problems using current best practice.
Chapter 1- Introduction and Contexts
Section 1
Chapter 2- The Starbuck Case: Methods for Addressing Confirmation Bias in Forensic Authorship Analysis
Tim Grant and Jack Grieve
Chapter 3- A Forensic Authorship Analysis of the Avia Napa Rape Statement
Andrea Nini and Lisa Donlan
Chapter 4- Linguistic Profiling: A Spanish Case Study
Sheila Queralt
Chapter 5- Forensic Plagiarism Detection and Analysis
Rui Sousa Silva
Section 2
Chapter 6- Mourning the Slow Death of Miranda: California v Ceja
Gerald R. McMenamin
Chapter 7- Detecting Faked Texts
I. Picornell & M.C Coulthard
Chapter 8- Joining ISIS? A Pragmatic Discourse Analysis of Chat Messages in Counterterrorism Case
Tanya Karoli Christensen
Chapter 9- "I Wanted to Leave a Long Time Ago": Casework in Suicide Letter Analysis: Methods Used and Lessons Learned
I.M. Nick
Ria Perkins, PhD, works as a civil servant for the Ministry of Defence, and is an Honorary Research Fellow at the Aston Institute for Forensic Linguistics in Birmingham, UK. Her casework specialty is authorship profiling, and her research interests include the language of persuasion and power, and Other Language Influence Detection (OLID).
Malcolm Coulthard, PhD, is Emeritus Professor of Forensic Linguistics at Aston University, UK, where he founded the Centre for Forensic Linguistics. He was Foundation President of the International Association of Forensic Linguists and Founding Editor of the International Journal of Speech Language and the Law and Language and Law - Linguaegem e Direito.