
Language of Judges
Description
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Content
- Intro
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction: Judging Language
- 1. Chomsky and Cardozo: Linguistics and the Law
- Cardozo's Hope: Keeping the Law Flexible
- Chomsky and the Nature of Linguistic Knowledge
- Chomsky, Cardozo, and Mrs. Palsgraf
- 2. The Judge as Linguist
- The Last Antecedent Rule
- Mrs. Anderson's Case
- Processing Strategies and the Last Antecedent Rule
- The Across the Board Rule: Mr. Judge
- Drugs and the Last Antecedent Rule
- Last Antecedents and Legal Canons
- Empty Words: The Interpretation of Pronouns
- Mr. Bass
- Pronouns and Taxation
- The And/Or Rule
- Problems of Scope-And Means Or
- Support of Delinquent Children-The Problem with And/Or
- Mr. Caine-Or Means And
- Adjectives and the Linguistics of Capital Punishment
- Why Judges Do Not Make Good Linguists
- 3. Stacking the Deck
- The Rule of Lenity
- Yermian: Lenity and the Scope of Adverbs
- What about Brown?
- RICO-Lenity and the Meaning of Words
- The Linguistics of Insurance Policies
- The Jacober Accident
- Ignoring Language-Partridge
- Understanding Ambiguous Contracts
- 4. When the Language Is Clear
- How Plain Can Language Be?
- The "Plain Language" of RICO
- When the Language and Its Opposite Are Both Plain
- Understanding Patterns: RICO as an Unclear Statute
- Turkette and Russello Revisited: Some More Fuzzy Concepts
- When Is Plain Language Enough?
- 5. Too Much Precision
- The Quest for Precision
- Pronouns, Precision, and the Law
- Pronouns and the Fifth Amendment
- Devices to Limit Ambiguity of Reference in Legal Language
- Party of the First Part
- Replacing Pronouns with Names
- Said and Same
- Using Special Words
- The War against Legal Language
- How Much Better Can We Do?
- 6. Some Problems with Words: Trying to Understand the Constitution
- People, Corporations, and Other Creatures
- What Is a Corporation
- Corporations, the Lexicon, and the Fifth Amendment
- Testimony and the Act of Speech
- The Current State of the Fifth Amendment
- Speech Acts: Linguistics and the Fifth Amendment
- Admissions
- Admitting by Bleeding
- What Is a Search?
- The Word "Search"
- The Fourth Amendment and the Lexicon
- Some Easy Cases and Some Hard Ones
- 7. Why It Hasn't Gotten Any Better
- Anderson and the Status Quo
- Expanding Legal Doctrine
- Getting Tough
- The Language of Judges
- Notes
- Table of Cases
- Index
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