‘It’s Always English in the Cop
Shop’: Accounts of Minority
Language Use in the Criminal
Justice System in Wales
IOLO MADOC-JONES and ODETTE PARRY
Iolo Madoc-Jones is Principal Lecturer in Social Welfare and Community
Justice and Odette Parry is Director of the Socal Inclusion Research Unit,
Glyndwr University, Wales
Abstract: European language activists have successfully campaigned for the right to use
regional or minority languages in judicial contexts. Despite this, such rights are rarely
exercised. This is commonly understood as a function of the unavailability and/or
inaccessibility of appropriate language services, so judicial authorities in a range of
countries are urged to do more to meet their obligations to meet the needs of minority
language speakers. The article draws on a study of language use in one criminal justice
system where the right to use a minority language exists. It uses a discourse analytic
approach to explore how first-language Welsh-speaking criminal justice service users
account for their choice, and usage, of language, and what purposes these accounts may
serve for narrators. Despite their commitment to the Welsh language, none of the study
respondents used Welsh in their most recent episodes in the police station or at court. Two
competing discursive constructions were evident in respondent accounts which served
specific objectives for narrators. A ‘down to them’ discursive construction, which drew on
wider imperialist discourses, positioned narrators as powerless victims of a system in
which they had no choice over language. This construction legitimised narrators’ claim
to Welshness and castigated agencies of the criminal justice system. Simultaneously,
however, narrators deployed ‘up to me’ discursive constructions to demonstrate resistance
to the role of victim. This construction positioned narrators as more powerful and as
exercising agency and choice in the criminal justice system. The article thus challenges
oversimplified understandings of minority language use and non-use in the criminal
justice system.
Keywords: diversity; power; language; Wales; justice; discourse
The criminal justice system is an arena where the exercise of State powers
over individuals is overt. It is an adversarial context; with the State,
represented by the prosecution, attempting to prove its case and the
defendant seeking to undermine that case. As Lipsky (1980) has argued,
the issues at stake are rarely, if ever, simply about ‘the facts’. Rather,
The Howard Journal Vol •• No ••. •• 2012 DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-2311.2012.00726.x
ISSN 0265-5527, pp. ••–••
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© 2012 The Authors
The Howard Journal of Criminal Justice © 2012 The Howard League and Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 9600 Garsington Road, Oxford OX4 2DQ, UK