“I’ve never met a barrister that sounded like I do”: accents, barristers and Bourdieusian capital

Date

2024-05-06

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

0969-5958
1469-9257

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor and Francis

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

Use of Received Pronunciation (RP) is a proxy for particular kinds of elite social capital, but it is also a professional norm and part of the Bourdieusian habitus of the Bar. This article uses the first empirical study of accent discrimination in relation to barristers in England and Wales as a basis for a theoretical consideration of the interaction between barristers and others: clients, jurors, judges and other barristers. In particular it evaluates ways in which understandings about accent, as a facet of social or cultural capital, impact on individual career decisions. It concludes that while considerable progress has been made on diversity of the profession, targeted action by the regulator and the profession is required to address perceptions of discrimination (and manifestations of discrimination itself) in a profession to whose activities speech is foundational.

Description

open access article

Keywords

Citation

Braber, N., Ching, J., Jarman, J., Robson, J., & Stevens, O. (2024) “I’ve never met a barrister that sounded like I do”: accents, barristers and Bourdieusian capital. International Journal of the Legal Profession, 31 (2), pp. 143–157

Rights

Research Institute

Non-affiliated research