Move-Structure Analysis of Police Written Witness Statements in Ghana: An Account of a Context-Defining Police Discours
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Written Communication
Abstract
The police written witness statement is a major evidentiary document
that has a direct bearing on the prosecution and adjudication of criminal
cases. The present study examines the rhetorical structure of police written
witness statements in Ghana as a genre by adopting Bhatia’s genre model
to examine 120 statements on alleged criminal cases that were sampled
from the Wenchi Division of the Bono Regional Police Command in Ghana.
The findings suggest that the police written witness statement is typically
characterized by five moves (Disclaiming, Identifying the Witness, Stating
Witness’s Involvement with the Case, Reporting the Facts, and Indicating Discharge
of Legal Responsibility) that bear facts necessary in the prosecution of crime
in Ghana’s criminal justice system. The choice of lexicogrammatical features
varied depending on the function of each move. The study concludes that
the witness statements possess peculiar functional features that meet the
legal demands of Ghana’s judicial expectations and police discourse.
Description
Research Article
