10.4225/03/5930c8dab0f11
Heydon, Georgina
Georgina
Heydon
The guilty silence: the discursive implications of non-response in a police interview
Monash University
2017
journal article
monash:6633
1959.1/6633
Right to silence
Conversation analysis
Police interviews
Monash University. Faculty of Arts. School of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics.
2017-06-02 02:09:29
Journal contribution
https://bridges.monash.edu/articles/journal_contribution/The_guilty_silence_the_discursive_implications_of_non-response_in_a_police_interview/5063620
Police evidentiary interviews with suspects provide a source of institutional language data in which the contributions of participants may be critical to their future, in the context of a subsequent court case. An analysis of the interactional strategies of police interview participants demonstrates that the contributions of the suspect are highly constrained in a number of ways, including allowable turn types and the management of topic initiations. If assumptions about 'preferred responses' based on ordinary conversation are used to interpret non-response in this particular institutional setting, then these interactionally restricted contributions, which will be presented as evidence, may be susceptible to adverse inference in a way that is unlikely to be addressed by the judicial system. This paper concludes that discourse analysis can present a case against the erosion of the defendant's rights, in particular the right to silence.