Identifying where people come from by how they speak: a methodological gap worth bridging. A rejoinder to Cambier-Langeveld

Authors

  • Lawrence Solan Brooklyn Law School

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/ijsll.v21i2.383

Keywords:

national identity, immigration

Author Biography

  • Lawrence Solan, Brooklyn Law School
    Lawrence M. Solan is the Don Forchelli Professor of Law and Director of the Center for the Study of Law, Language and Cognition at Brooklyn Law School. He holds a PhD in Linguistics from the University of Massachusetts and a JD from Harvard Law School. Much of his writing is about the interpretation of statutes and contracts. His books include The Language of Judges, Speaking of Crime (with Peter Tiersma) and The Language of Statutes: Laws and their Interpretation, all published by the University of Chicago Press. He and Peter Tiersma also co-edited The Oxford Handbook of Language and Law (2012). Solan has been a visiting professor at the Yale Law School, and in the Psychology Department and Humanities Counsel at Princeton University.

Published

2015-02-18

Issue

Section

Commentaries/Responses

How to Cite

Solan, L. (2015). Identifying where people come from by how they speak: a methodological gap worth bridging. A rejoinder to Cambier-Langeveld. International Journal of Speech, Language and the Law, 21(2), 383-387. https://doi.org/10.1558/ijsll.v21i2.383