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Transforming Legal Communication: Cognitive and Multimodal Approaches

Edited by: Ruth Breeze, Magdalena Szczyrbak

ISBN13: 9781041144403
To be Published: October 2026
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £155.00





This book examines creative new ways in which legal and administrative information are communicated to diverse audiences. Using a range of theoretical frameworks, it explores these transformations within broader societal issues such as legal activism, access to justice, and citizen participation.

Increasingly, there has been widespread recognition that non-specialists need to be able to understand legal information. Although plain language campaigns have made considerable progress in ensuring that legal texts are now less dense and more readable, such measures are often shown to be insufficient. For this reason, many institutions such as parliaments and courts have made considerable efforts to present this information in more attractive digital formats, and to disseminate the core messages via other media including video and virtual reality. In addition to addressing the social and political trends underlying these changes, the volume provides evidence of various cognitive and multimodal strategies used in different languages and cultures, investigating discourse practices in Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America and North America.

The collection will be a valuable resource for academics, researchers and professionals working in the areas of law, public administration, communication, and applied linguistics.

Subjects:
Jurisprudence
Contents:
1. Communicating the law: Messages, media, mediation
Ruth Breeze and Magdalena Szczyrbak

Part 1: Communicating the work of legal institutions
2. Mediating a legal institution: Level of explanatory ambition as a measure of knowledge complexity
Jan Engberg
3. Extended reality and extended modality to communicate legal information to new audiences: Applications and perspectives
Patrizia Anesa
4. Drawing distinctions beyond the verbal: Intersemiotic translation, multimodality and multisensoriality in law
Olimpia Giuliana Loddo
5. Communicating knowledge about the Constitution of the Italian Republic on https://www.senatoragazzi.it
Silvia Cacchiani
6. Clarifying the rule of law crisis: Recontextualisation strategies in Polish legal blogs, journalism and civil discourse
Stanisław Goźdź-Roszkowski
7. Holding the state responsible: Discourse in human rights reports and (social) media
Barbara de Cock and Stéphanie Pécher
8. “I am proud to have served…”: Language choice and argumentation in political resignation letters
Martin Solly

Part 2: Involving the public
9. Stories that bridge the gap: Storytelling to mediate legal knowledge on hate crimes
Jūratė Ruzaitė
10. Communicating law to lay audiences: A multimodal analysis of student-produced legal popularization videos
Sichen Xia
11. Between emotion and cognition: Legal knowledge mediation in judges’ encounters with sovereign citizens
Magdalena Szczyrbak
12. Alternatively negotiating justice: Generic structure and frames in Nigerian arbitration courtroom interaction
Florence Oluwaseyi Daniel
13. “… how we will meet our climate commitments”: On strategies to increase public participation in legislation in Ireland
Davide Mazzi
14. Evaluating the accessibility of digital portals designed to educate Pakistani women on domestic violence and harassment laws
Saqlain Hassan and Sumbal Bibi
15. Diversity, equity and inclusion and the law
Judith Turnbull