Court Interpreters and Fair Trials by John Henry Dingfelder Stone.
Material type:
TextPublication details: Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan; 2018.Edition: 1st edDescription: xv, 337 pISBN: - 9783319753553
- Criminal justice, Administration of
- Criminology
- Human rights
- International criminal law
- Natural language processing (Computer science)
- Social justice
- Trials
- Human Rights and Crime
- Criminal Justice
- International Criminal Law
- Juries and Criminal Trials
- Natural Language Processing (NLP)
- Social Justice, Equality and Human Rights
- K2155 .S76 2018
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Books
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African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights Library | K2155 .S76 2018 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 10038752 |
Includes bibliography and index.
Chapter 1. Introduction -- Chapter 2. The Right to an Interpreter -- Chapter 3. Courtroom Interpreting -- Chapter 4. The Right to a Fair Trial -- Chapter 5. Interpreter Error and its Implications -- Chapter 6. Systemic Issues -- Chapter 7. Analysis -- Chapter 8. Conclusions and Proposals.
Globalization has increased the number of individuals in criminal proceedings who are unable to understand the language of the courtroom, and as a result the number of court interpreters has also increased. But unsupervised interpreters can severely undermine the fairness of a criminal proceeding. In this innovative and methodological new study, Dingfelder Stone comprehensively examines the multitudes of mistakes made by interpreters, and explores the resultant legal and practical implications. Whilst scholars of interpreting studies have researched the prevalence of interpreter error for decades, the effect of these mistakes on criminal proceedings has largely gone unanalyzed by legal scholars. Drawing upon both interpreting studies research and legal scholarship alike, this engaging and timely study analyzes the impact of court interpreters on the right to a fair trial under international law, which forms the minimum baseline standard for national systems.
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