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Ep 079: Exploring the Meaning of Legal Terms through Corpus Linguistics

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Manage episode 264563863 series 2389291
Content provided by Ben Ambrogi, Populus Radio, and Robert Ambrogi. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ben Ambrogi, Populus Radio, and Robert Ambrogi or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

At BYU Law in Provo, Utah, a first-of-its-kind technology platform is enabling legal researchers to explore the meanings of legal words and phrases by examining the contexts in which they historically were used. The Law and Corpus Linguistics platform enables users to examine large collections of historical texts to help determine, for example, what early drafters meant by a phrase such as “bear arms.”

In this episode of LawNext, my guest is David Armond, head of infrastructure and technology and senior law librarian at BYU Law, who was instrumental in helping create and launch the platform. We discuss this emerging field of corpus linguistics and how it is being used by lawyers, judges and legal scholars.

The BYU Law collection is now home to seven collections of historical text, or corpora, including founding-era American English (1760-1799), early modern English (1475-1800), Supreme Court opinions, U.S. caselaw, records of the Constitutional Convention of 1787, and more.

As it happened, host Bob Ambrogi interviewed Armond live at BYU Law on the very day that the school decided to close down due to the coronavirus crisis. Before discussing their scheduled topic of corpus linguistics, Armond and Ambrogi had a conversation about how a law school prepares to shut down and go online. That conversation was posted as LawNext Episode 66: How One Law School Prepared for Coronavirus Shutdown.

NEW:

Comment on this show: Record a voice comment on your mobile phone and send it to info@lawnext.com.

We are now on Patreon! Subscribe to our page to be able to access show transcripts, or to submit a question for our guests.

  continue reading

273 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 264563863 series 2389291
Content provided by Ben Ambrogi, Populus Radio, and Robert Ambrogi. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ben Ambrogi, Populus Radio, and Robert Ambrogi or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

At BYU Law in Provo, Utah, a first-of-its-kind technology platform is enabling legal researchers to explore the meanings of legal words and phrases by examining the contexts in which they historically were used. The Law and Corpus Linguistics platform enables users to examine large collections of historical texts to help determine, for example, what early drafters meant by a phrase such as “bear arms.”

In this episode of LawNext, my guest is David Armond, head of infrastructure and technology and senior law librarian at BYU Law, who was instrumental in helping create and launch the platform. We discuss this emerging field of corpus linguistics and how it is being used by lawyers, judges and legal scholars.

The BYU Law collection is now home to seven collections of historical text, or corpora, including founding-era American English (1760-1799), early modern English (1475-1800), Supreme Court opinions, U.S. caselaw, records of the Constitutional Convention of 1787, and more.

As it happened, host Bob Ambrogi interviewed Armond live at BYU Law on the very day that the school decided to close down due to the coronavirus crisis. Before discussing their scheduled topic of corpus linguistics, Armond and Ambrogi had a conversation about how a law school prepares to shut down and go online. That conversation was posted as LawNext Episode 66: How One Law School Prepared for Coronavirus Shutdown.

NEW:

Comment on this show: Record a voice comment on your mobile phone and send it to info@lawnext.com.

We are now on Patreon! Subscribe to our page to be able to access show transcripts, or to submit a question for our guests.

  continue reading

273 episodes

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