|
Issue |
Title |
|
Vol 3, No 1 |
“Not everyday business.” A caseworker perspective on interpreter provision for deaf refugees and cooperation with interpreters |
Abstract
PDF
|
Sonja Pöllabauer |
|
Vol 1, No 1-2 |
Unfolding occupational boundary work: Public service interpreting in social services for structurally vulnerable migrant populations in Finland |
Abstract
PDF
|
Camilla Nordberg, Hanna Kara |
|
Vol 2, No 2 |
The right to receive information and the right to communicate: Keys to the Romanian translation and interpreting policy in prisons |
Abstract
|
Bianca Vitalaru |
|
Vol 1, No 1-2 |
The right to an interpreter — A guarantee of legal certainty and equal access to public services in Sweden? |
Abstract
PDF
|
Kristina Gustafsson, Eva Norström, Linnéa Åberg |
|
Vol 3, No 1 |
Expectations regarding interpreters in Brazil in the light of pandemic-enforced technological change: A pilot study |
Abstract
PDF
|
Renata Machado, Jonathan Downie |
|
Vol 3, No 1 |
Vulnerability, moral concepts, and ethics in interpreting |
Abstract
PDF
|
Xiaohui Yuan |
|
Vol 1, No 1-2 |
Language policies for social justice — Translation, interpreting, and access |
Abstract
PDF
|
Esther Monzó-Nebot, Christopher D. Mellinger |
|
Vol 3, No 1 |
Asylum hearings in Italy: Who mediates between cultures? |
Abstract
PDF
|
Amalia Agata Maria Amato, Fabrizio Gallai |
|
Vol 3, No 1 |
The incidence of empathy when interpreting in the field for vulnerable populations in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict |
Abstract
PDF
|
Manuel Barea Muñoz |
|
Vol 3, No 1 |
“I faced so many barriers”: Interpreting with deaf women survivors of domestic violence as a vulnerable population |
Abstract
PDF
|
Jemina Napier, Lucy Clark, Lorraine Leeson, Lianne Quigley |
|
Vol 3, No 1 |
Interpreting for vulnerable populations: Tracing the role of interpreters in contexts of vulnerability |
Abstract
PDF
|
Lucia Ruiz Rosendo, Conor Martin |
|
1 - 11 of 11 Items |
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