Article published In: Profession, Identity and Status: Translators and Interpreters as an Occupational Group
Edited by Rakefet Sela-Sheffy and Miriam Shlesinger †
[Translation and Interpreting Studies 4:2] 2009
► pp. 135–154
Legal and translational occupations in Spain
Regulation and specialization in jurisdictional struggles
Published online: 14 January 2010
https://doi.org/10.1075/tis.4.2.07mon
https://doi.org/10.1075/tis.4.2.07mon
The aim of this article is twofold. First, I will outline a theoretical framework that synthesizes some concepts from both the sociology of professions and Bourdieu’s economy of practice. Within this framework, distinction and legitimation will be highlighted as two major strategies employed by occupational groups to advance their interests within the labor market. In the second part of the article, I will discuss two particular conflicts, both of which involve Spanish certified (or “sworn” in European Spanish) translators and interpreters (TIs). The first is a jurisdictional struggle between certified TIs and notaries public (a legal occupation) and the other, a struggle between certified TIs and court TIs. These struggles illustrate how the jurisdiction, the segment of the labor market formerly occupied by certified TIs, has been progressively claimed by notaries public and court TIs through various strategies and processes, and how certified TIs have in turn reacted by pursuing strategies of their own. These examples show how and why a particular group may lose ground to other groups using diverse strategies and investing different types of capital (in Bourdieu’s sense of the term). Moreover, these cases exemplify how some professionalization processes and projects have worked in the Spanish context and how certain occupational groups are developing professionalization strategies of their own.
Cited by (7)
Cited by seven other publications
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Angelelli, Claudia V.
Monzó Nebot, Esther
Wolf, Michaela
Katan, David
2011. Status of translators. In Handbook of Translation Studies [Handbook of Translation Studies, 2], ► pp. 146 ff.
Dam, Helle V. & Karen Korning Zethsen
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