Georgina Heydon

Professor Georgina Heydon

Professor

Details

Open to

  • Masters Research or PhD student supervision

About

Georgina Heydon is a Professor in Criminology and Justice Studies, and a forensic linguist.

In 2005, Prof Georgina Heydon published the first monograph to analyse the language of police interviewing in Australia from a linguistic and discourse analytic perspective. Her foundational work on the linguistic structures of police interviews and moral frameworks in questioning provides new insights into investigative interviewing by revealing the language strategies used by police and suspects to construct evidentiary narratives. Over the last ten years, her research has attempted to contribute a new level of detail to the analysis of legal-societal issues in policing by focusing on the discursive phenomena that underlie testimonial integrity, methods of detecting deception, formality and the right to silence.

More recently, Georgina has begun to examine questioning procedures across a broader range of contexts, including tribunals, courtrooms and the media. She believes that there is much to be learned from the extensive research underlying modern police interviewing training, and that these insights can help to improve questioning practices in other contexts. She is particularly interested in improving practices for eliciting information from vulnerable members of the community (e.g. victim survivors of sexual assault, refugees) and in providing basic interviewing training for police in post-conflict and post-colonial regions. As a linguist, she hopes to expand best practice cognitive interviewing methods to operate effectively in multi-lingual and multi-ethnic communities.

Georgina is a co-convenor of the Gendered Violence and Abuse Research Alliance in GUSS. (https://gevara.net.au/)

She is a Past President of the International Association of Forensic Linguists (http://www.iafl.org/) , a member of the International Investigative Interviewing Research Group (https://www.iiirg.org/) and the Australian and New Zealand Society of Criminology.

Georgina is presently lead Chief Investigator on a Criminology Research Grants project examining the use of anonymous and confidential reporting of sexual assault and the use of these reports by police in Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland.

Georgina is also a Chief Investigator on a Legal Services Board grant with Professor Bronwyn Naylor (GSBL, RMIT University) and Stan Winford (Centre for Innovative Justice) in partnership with Woor Dungin Aboriginal organisation to investigate the impact of criminal record checking on Aboriginal employment in Victoria. This follows similar research in the Northern Territory and Western Australia.

From 2009–2013, Georgina was a chief investigator with Prof Bronwyn Naylor, Prof Marilyn Pittard and Dr Moira Paterson (Law Faculty, Monash University) on an Australian Research Council (ARC) Linkage Project 'Living Down the Past' (LP0990348 2009–2012) that examines the impact of police record checking by employers on ex-offenders and their rehabilitation. Earlier work on the project received funding through the Law Services Board Small Grants Scheme.

Industry Experience:
Professor Heydon provides expert testimony in cases involving language analysis, including authorship of documents and trademark disputes.

Designed and delivered programs of investigative interviewing training for the Australian Federal Police and police academies in Canada, Belgium, Sweden, the European Police College, and Indonesia, as well as interviewing and language training sessions for the National Judicial College of Australia, the Judicial College of Victoria, the Victorian Law Institute and the Refugee and Migration Tribunals (Australia).
Founded the Australian Investigative Interviewing Network in 2007, bringing together police members and academic researchers in police interviewing.
Convened the inaugural Investigative Interviewing Forum for Australian police practitioners and researchers (10th July, 2007) and have coordinated similar master classes and workshops most years since.
Regularly provide expert forensic evidence (reports and court testimony) in court cases involving linguistic data in Magistrates' County and Supreme court cases.
Regularly provide consultations, advice and workshops in organisational communications to multinational corporations and government departments, especially in the area of language and gender in the workplace and effective interviewing.
Immediate Past President of the of the International Association of Forensic Linguists (www.iafl.org)
Member of the International Investigative Interviewing Research Group (www.iiirg.org)

Media experience:
Prof Georgina Heydon is an expert in police interviewing, language use and forensic linguistics. She has been interviewed many times for radio and print news stories and has appeared as a guest speaker on ABC and SBS TV and Channel 31's Life of Crime programme. She has been a guest panel member at the Melbourne International Writers' festival, the Sisters in Crime Law Week Conversations evening and many industry events.

Supervisor projects

  • Documenting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Women and Gender-Diverse Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander’s Lived Experiences of Image-based Sexual Abuse in Victoria
  • 11 Jan 2023
  • The Policing of Sex Work in South Africa Human Rights Outcomes, Challenges and Opportunities
  • 1 Jan 2021
  • Mandarin-Speaking Interviewees’ Understanding and Perceptions of Police Interviewing Mediated by Interpreters
  • 17 Jan 2020
  • A Cultural Linguistics Approach to Humour Translation: A Persian Study
  • 10 Apr 2019
  • Involuntary False Confessions: A Legal Problem
  • 13 Feb 2018
  • Reinterpreting the Line: Young Australians’ Engagement with Social Technology for the Primary Prevention of Gender-based Violence
  • 21 Jul 2017
  • `Can You Speak English Properly?¿ Linguistic Gatekeeping and Interpreter Use in the Justice System
  • 22 Feb 2016
  • 'It's Better to See a Tiger than a Police Officer': Adapting the Cognitive Interview Technique to the Indonesian Policing Context
  • 5 May 2015
  • Police cognitive interviews conducted through interpreters - An experimental study of the inherent conflicts in interlingual operations
  • 30 Nov 2009

Teaching interests

Analysing communication and language in a legal setting, particularly relating to police interviewing, criminal records, lie detection and cross-cultural communication; use of a critical discourse analysis framework and the micro-analysis of texts.

Research interests

Linguistics, Law, Criminology, Language Studies, Sociology, Psychology

Dr Heydon is currently supervising research students in forensic linguistics, crime and language, investigative interviewing, legal interpreting and cryptologic linguistics. She has also supervised students undertaking research concerning broader criminology and criminal justice topics and welcome proposals from aspiring researchers in the justice field, particularly in forensic linguistics and investigative interviewing.
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Acknowledgement of Country

RMIT University acknowledges the people of the Woi wurrung and Boon wurrung language groups of the eastern Kulin Nation on whose unceded lands we conduct the business of the University. RMIT University respectfully acknowledges their Ancestors and Elders, past and present. RMIT also acknowledges the Traditional Custodians and their Ancestors of the lands and waters across Australia where we conduct our business - Artwork 'Sentient' by Hollie Johnson, Gunaikurnai and Monero Ngarigo.