Dakota Wing
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dakwing.bsky.social
Dakota Wing
@dakwing.bsky.social
Forensic linguist
PhD candidate at York University
#ForensicLinguistics #LanguageAndLaw beekeeper 🐝 skier ⛷️ dog dad 🐕
he/him
📍Toronto
www.DakotaWing.com
www.ForensicLing.com
My article with Marianne Laplante in the Journal of Criminology and Criminal Justice is available now as Advance Access! We analyze the language of wanted person lists produced by the @winnipegpolice.bsky.social and Winnipeg Crime Stoppers and offer some recommendations.

doi.org/10.3138/cjcc...
Wanted Words: The Language of Wanted Person Lists | Canadian Journal of Criminology and Criminal Justice
Wanted lists are a policing communicative tool that facilitates locating and apprehending persons wanted by the police through public engagement. To date, research has not investigated the language of these wanted lists. This paper begins to address this gap by examining the language of wanted lists produced by a Canadian municipal police agency from a critical sociolinguistic approach. The findings demonstrate that many linguistic features reflect features of a technical police or legal register (e.g., legal homonyms, uncommon words, nominalizations, passive constructions, and long complex sentences) and are inconsistent with the expected audience (the general public) and the expected goals of wanted lists. We suggest that this language can limit comprehension and reduce urgency, potentially reducing the public’s assistance in locating wanted persons. Alternative goals that the language appears to be orienting to are discussed, such as establishing a person as “wanted” (rather than providing information to facilitate the locating and arrest of a wanted person), reliance on public familiarity with a wanted person, social pressure, and image management. Recommendations are provided that are aimed at increasing public assistance in locating and apprehending wanted persons.
doi.org
May 16, 2025 at 3:51 PM
Reposted by Dakota Wing
THE WINNIPEG JETS WIN GAME 7 IN DOUBLE OT TO ADVANCE TO ROUND 2!! 🚨🚨
May 5, 2025 at 3:13 AM
Some forensic linguistics for you…
Our analysis is featured in this episode of @bbcsounds.bsky.social
Stalked podcast with @carolecadwalla.bsky.social @georgiajcatt.bsky.social

open.spotify.com/episode/2CVF...
4. Identity Leakage
Stalked · Episode
open.spotify.com
February 25, 2025 at 9:49 PM
🇨🇦
February 21, 2025 at 4:32 AM
The Proceedings of the Canadian Symposium on Language and Law are now published!
Here’s our Introduction (letter from the editors) giving an overview of the symposium and the papers in the proceedings: wally.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/de...

Full issue here: wally.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/de...
wally.journals.yorku.ca
February 5, 2025 at 2:09 AM
Uh…I mean…
December 3, 2024 at 10:24 PM
Figured I’d make my first post here a big one!

Out now- our Cambridge Element in the Forensic Linguistics series “Decoding Terrorism: An interdisciplinary approach to a loan-actor case”

We approach the 2019 Halle terrorism case from a variety of perspectives.
Delighted to announce the publication of the Cambridge Element

"Decoding Terrorism: An Interdisciplinary Approach to a Lone-Actor Case"

by Julia Kupper, Marie Bosjen-Moller, Tanya Karoli Christensen, @dakwing.bsky.social , Marcus Papadopulos and Sharon Smith

www.cambridge.org/core/element...
Decoding Terrorism
Cambridge Core - Law: General Interest - Decoding Terrorism
www.cambridge.org
November 22, 2024 at 2:04 PM