外人听到的审判

IF 0.5 4区 社会学 Q4 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
E. Ng
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引用次数: 0

摘要

此前对陪审团理解能力的研究主要集中在英美法庭上,并强调了对非英语专业陪审员理解陪审团指示能力的担忧。这些研究指出,法律术语的使用是问题的主要原因,而忽视了陈述方式对陪审团理解的影响。本研究旨在考察中国陪审员理解以英语进行的审判的能力,他们将英语作为第二语言甚至是外语(L2),并探讨英语为第二语言的人在理解法庭话语时发现的问题。我们从社会中随机抽取符合陪审员资格的本地华人(n=53)参加一项法庭话语理解测试,测试使用的是香港高等法院两个陪审团审判的真实录音。以语音投影框架(Heffer 2018)为参考,本研究表明,虽然话语发声是参与者理解问题的原因,但正如对母语为英语的陪审员的研究所表明的那样,在母语为l2的陪审员的情况下,发言者对法庭话语的身体发声被发现是阻碍陪审员理解话语的重要因素。本文认为,要使法庭话语对讲第二语言的陪审员无障碍,需要的不仅仅是改善话语发声。身体发声同样重要,甚至更重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Trials heard by a foreign ear
Previous studies into jury comprehension have focused on Anglo-American courts and highlighted concerns about lay English-speaking jurors’ ability to understand jury instructions. Such studies have pointed to the use of legalese as the major cause of the problem and overlooked the impact of the manner of delivery on jury comprehension. This study sets out to examine Chinese jurors’ ability to understand trials conducted in English, which they speak as a second or even a foreign language (L2), and to explore what L2 speakers of English find problematic for their comprehension of courtroom discourse. A random sample of local Chinese eligible for jury service (n=53) are recruited from the community to take part in a comprehension test of courtroom discourse using authentic audio recordings of two jury trials from the High Court of Hong Kong. Taking the Voice Projection Framework (Heffer 2018) as a point of reference, this study demonstrates that, while discursive voicing is to blame for the participants’ comprehension problem, as manifested by studies with native English-speaking jurors, in the case of L2-speaking jurors, the speakers’ physical voicing of courtroom discourse is found to be a significant factor in impeding jurors’ comprehension of the discourse. This article argues that making courtroom discourse accessible to L2 speaking jurors requires more than improving discursive voicing. Physical voicing matters as much, if not more.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
25.00%
发文量
18
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Speech, Language and the Law is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes articles on any aspect of forensic language, speech and audio analysis. Founded in 1994 as Forensic Linguistics, the journal changed to its present title in 2003 to reflect a broadening of academic coverage and readership. Subscription to the journal is included in membership of the International Association of Forensic Linguists and the International Association for Forensic Phonetics and Acoustics.
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