In:Dimensions of Forensic Linguistics
Edited by John Gibbons and M. Teresa Turell
[AILA Applied Linguistics Series 5] 2008
► pp. 27–46
Language education for law professionals
Published online: 21 November 2008
https://doi.org/10.1075/aals.5.04nor
https://doi.org/10.1075/aals.5.04nor
Increasing globalisation has led to English becoming the lingua franca of international legal practice requiring L2 legal professionals to develop high level skills in English thus creating significant challenges for language educators who may not have a background in law. This article provides an overview of language education for L2 legal professionals. Developments and practice in English for Legal Purposes (ELP) viewed within English for Specific Purposes (ESP) are presented to provide a model focusing on the interrelated dimensions of learner context, methodology and teacher background. I acknowledge the contribution of genre studies in providing pedagogical descriptions of written legal language and stress the need for further ethnographic investigation to identify and describe relevant oral legal genres.
Cited by (5)
Cited by five other publications
Papa, Dubravka
Mroczyńska, Katarzyna & Tomasz Michta
Muravev, Yury
Nkomo, Dion
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