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Jennifer Andrus in: Language in Society 39/2010
"Courtroom Talk and Neocolonial Control is the most conceptually sophisticated, comprehensive and compelling attempt to manage the daunting challenge of macro-micro integration in the law and language literature - and one that brings this crucial theoretical issue to the forefront of not just language and law studies or forensic linguistics but social science more generally. This is necessary reading not only for socio- and forensic linguists but law and society/social theorists as well."
Greg Matoesian in: International Journal of Speech Language and the Law 1/2009
"This is an excellent book."
M. Catherine Gruber in: Linguist List 20.2284
"[T]his is a fascinating book that offers important insights into how lawyers use linguistic and discursive strategies to control the testimony of witnesses and into the state of inequality facing Aboriginal people in Australia. [...] [T]his is an important book for all those interested in courtroom discourse, neocolonialism, and the critical analysis of language use." Laura Felton Rosulek in: Journal of Sociolinguistics 16/2 (2012)