What is it about?
Sometime a person on the witness stand in a Jamaican courtroom is asked about information related to time e.g. what was the sequence of events, what was the duration of a crime etc. Jamaican Creole and English have different grammatical means of expressing time. I investigate how judges interpret the time information in these testimonies.
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Why is it important?
It is reasonable to suspect that instances of miscommunication might occur inside a Jamaican courtroom given the two languages operating there--English is the language of the courts, but many of the defendants use Jamaican Creole. This article pinpoints a specific area of miscommunication and outlines how and where it might occur in courtroom proceedings.
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This page is a summary of: Converting time reference in judges’ summations: a study in time reference management in a Creole continuum courtroom, International Journal of Speech Language and the Law, February 2015, Equinox Publishing,
DOI: 10.1558/ijsll.v21i2.225.
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