Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- Conventions
-
Chapter One Introduction -
Chapter Two When Police Interview Victims of Sexual Assault -
Chapter Three Obtaining Valid Discourse from Suspects PEACE-fully -
Chapter Four The Guilt-Presumptive Nature of Custodial Interrogations in the United States -
Chapter Five The Discourse Structure of Blame Mitigation in a Police Interrogation -
Chapter Six Now the Rest of the Story -
Chapter Seven Patterns of Cooperation between Police Interviewers with Suspected Sex Offenders -
Chapter Eight Supporting Competing Narratives -
Chapter Nine Narrative Construction in Interpreted Police Interviews -
Chapter Ten Interactional Management in a Simulated Police Interview -
Chapter Eleven Non-Native Speakers, Miranda Rights, and Custodial Interrogation -
Chapter Twelve “Tell Me in Your Own Words …” -
Chapter Thirteen “Are You Saying You Were Stabbed … ?” -
Chapter Fourteen Functions of Transmodal Metalanguage for Collaborative Writing in Police-Witness Interviews -
Chapter Fifteen Reconstructing Suspects’ Stories in Various Police Record Styles -
Chapter Sixteen Police Records in Court - Index
(p.ix) Conventions
(p.ix) Conventions
- Source:
- The Discourse of Police Interviews
- Author(s):
- Marianne Mason, Frances Rock
- Publisher:
- University of Chicago Press
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- Title Pages
- Conventions
-
Chapter One Introduction -
Chapter Two When Police Interview Victims of Sexual Assault -
Chapter Three Obtaining Valid Discourse from Suspects PEACE-fully -
Chapter Four The Guilt-Presumptive Nature of Custodial Interrogations in the United States -
Chapter Five The Discourse Structure of Blame Mitigation in a Police Interrogation -
Chapter Six Now the Rest of the Story -
Chapter Seven Patterns of Cooperation between Police Interviewers with Suspected Sex Offenders -
Chapter Eight Supporting Competing Narratives -
Chapter Nine Narrative Construction in Interpreted Police Interviews -
Chapter Ten Interactional Management in a Simulated Police Interview -
Chapter Eleven Non-Native Speakers, Miranda Rights, and Custodial Interrogation -
Chapter Twelve “Tell Me in Your Own Words …” -
Chapter Thirteen “Are You Saying You Were Stabbed … ?” -
Chapter Fourteen Functions of Transmodal Metalanguage for Collaborative Writing in Police-Witness Interviews -
Chapter Fifteen Reconstructing Suspects’ Stories in Various Police Record Styles -
Chapter Sixteen Police Records in Court - Index