Matters of Suggestibility, Memory and Time: Child Witnesses in Court and What Really Happened

As a result of an increasing awareness of child abuse over the last few decades, children have been admitted as court witnesses more frequently, yet there has been persistent wariness about the reliability of their testimony. Examining the interaction of legal rationales and paradigms of development...

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Main Author: Johanna F. Motzkau
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: FQS 2007-01-01
Series:Forum: Qualitative Social Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/204
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spelling doaj-c322a88c3f034500a59511ccf45520022020-11-24T22:53:40ZdeuFQS Forum: Qualitative Social Research1438-56272007-01-0181203Matters of Suggestibility, Memory and Time: Child Witnesses in Court and What Really HappenedJohanna F. Motzkau0The Open UniversityAs a result of an increasing awareness of child abuse over the last few decades, children have been admitted as court witnesses more frequently, yet there has been persistent wariness about the reliability of their testimony. Examining the interaction of legal rationales and paradigms of developmental psychology, it would appear that children are still frequently positioned as deficient and passive witnesses. Three tropes can be distinguished: 1. Children are positioned as unreliable containers of facts. 2. Children have proved to be irritable dispensers of information. 3. Children are volatile interactants. In this paper I will examine how the English legal system employs special measures that are designed to manage children's apparent deficiencies while guaranteeing the accuracy and admissibility of their evidence. My analysis unfolds around the specific case of video recorded evidence. Using courtroom observations and data from interviews with legal professionals, I will follow the trajectory of the video from its planning and recording by the police to its presentation in court. Inspired by the work of Isabelle STENGERS and Bruno LATOUR, and drawing on discourse analytical tools, I will show that the collision of the different time zones of veridicality creates circumstances under which the video itself can become an ambiguous agent and ultimately a fanciful witness. URN: urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs0701145http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/204time zones of veridicalitysuggestibilitychild witnessesmemorycredibilitysexual abusetime and discourse
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Johanna F. Motzkau
spellingShingle Johanna F. Motzkau
Matters of Suggestibility, Memory and Time: Child Witnesses in Court and What Really Happened
Forum: Qualitative Social Research
time zones of veridicality
suggestibility
child witnesses
memory
credibility
sexual abuse
time and discourse
author_facet Johanna F. Motzkau
author_sort Johanna F. Motzkau
title Matters of Suggestibility, Memory and Time: Child Witnesses in Court and What Really Happened
title_short Matters of Suggestibility, Memory and Time: Child Witnesses in Court and What Really Happened
title_full Matters of Suggestibility, Memory and Time: Child Witnesses in Court and What Really Happened
title_fullStr Matters of Suggestibility, Memory and Time: Child Witnesses in Court and What Really Happened
title_full_unstemmed Matters of Suggestibility, Memory and Time: Child Witnesses in Court and What Really Happened
title_sort matters of suggestibility, memory and time: child witnesses in court and what really happened
publisher FQS
series Forum: Qualitative Social Research
issn 1438-5627
publishDate 2007-01-01
description As a result of an increasing awareness of child abuse over the last few decades, children have been admitted as court witnesses more frequently, yet there has been persistent wariness about the reliability of their testimony. Examining the interaction of legal rationales and paradigms of developmental psychology, it would appear that children are still frequently positioned as deficient and passive witnesses. Three tropes can be distinguished: 1. Children are positioned as unreliable containers of facts. 2. Children have proved to be irritable dispensers of information. 3. Children are volatile interactants. In this paper I will examine how the English legal system employs special measures that are designed to manage children's apparent deficiencies while guaranteeing the accuracy and admissibility of their evidence. My analysis unfolds around the specific case of video recorded evidence. Using courtroom observations and data from interviews with legal professionals, I will follow the trajectory of the video from its planning and recording by the police to its presentation in court. Inspired by the work of Isabelle STENGERS and Bruno LATOUR, and drawing on discourse analytical tools, I will show that the collision of the different time zones of veridicality creates circumstances under which the video itself can become an ambiguous agent and ultimately a fanciful witness. URN: urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs0701145
topic time zones of veridicality
suggestibility
child witnesses
memory
credibility
sexual abuse
time and discourse
url http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/204
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