Language difficulties in the youth criminal justice process

07 November 2023, Version 1
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.

Abstract

This study brings together teenage language comprehension and the field of youth criminal justice by examining the comprehension of Wh-questions in police and court interrogations by youth suspects. Research shows that 50-75% of teenage suspects have a significant - previously undiagnosed - language impairment (Bryan et al. 2007; Snow & Powell; 2005; 2008; Snow et.al. 2016; Fleetwood-Bird 2018). Wh-questions are a crucial part of interrogations since they are about the participants and circumstances of the events, and the corresponding answers will determine the degree of guilt. We show that (Dutch) interrogator utterances contain many complex Wh-questions that are known to be difficult for children with Developmental Language Disorder (DLD). We argue that this increases the vulnerability of youth suspects in criminal justice, thus undermining the fundamental right to a fair trial (a.o. Article 14 ICCPR 1976).

Keywords

Language Development
youth offenders
human rights

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