• All
  • Advocacy
  • ASL
  • Athena Matilsky
  • Attorney Education
  • Business Practices
  • Certification
  • Community
  • Community Interpreting
  • Conference Interpreting
  • Continuing Education
  • Court Interpreting
  • Equipment
  • Ethics
  • Fiction
  • Finances
  • Gladys Matthews
  • Hilda Zavala-Shymanik
  • Idioms
  • Interpreters
  • Interpreting
  • Janis Palma
  • Jiraporn Ann Huynh
  • Jules Lapprand
  • Julli Jaramillo
  • Language
  • Language Associations
  • Leadership
  • LOTS
  • Medical Interpreting
  • Mentoring
  • NAJIT Academy
  • NAJIT Affairs
  • NAJIT Conference
  • New Ideas
  • Nutrition
  • Odds & Ends
  • Past Posts
  • Personal Growth
  • Professional Development
  • Professional Hazard
  • Professional Practices
  • Recent Posts
  • Reme Bashi
  • Remote Interpreting
  • Self care
  • Technology
  • Terminology
  • The Profession
  • Tools of the trade
  • TRAINING
  • Translation
  • Uncategorized
  • Urszula Bunting
  • Volunteer

In most states, a bilingual individual who wishes to be on the court’s roster of qualified interpreters must meet certain requirements. These are not whimsical or random requirements. The first one is usually an orientation seminar about the court system in the state where the...

This article will exclusively address the interpretation aspect of the proceedings, omitting other case background and charges, which are readily available online. The defendant, Oscar Juracan Juracan, faces 1st-degree criminal charges before the Hudson County Superior Court in New Jersey and is a speaker of...

There are big fish and little fish in a courtroom’s ecosystem. Judges are definitely the biggest fish of all. Interpreters? Well, that’s what I have been thinking about: where do we fit in the courtroom’s ecosystem? Throughout my years in this profession, I have encountered...