ABSTRACT

Across many social and commercial domains, governments regulate the official names used to identify individuals, groups, places, companies & products, and even diseases. This innovative volume investigates the relationship between names and the law, with its significant implications for identity (individual, familial, race, ethnicity, gender, species, brand & product industry, etc.) and status (social, scientific, economic, and political).

I. M. Nick introduces the state of the art on this interdisciplinary topic¾ providing a diachronic and synchronic view of onomastics and the law¾ and expert contributors examine seminal Anglo-American legal cases to demonstrate how name polices relate to broader questions of power, privilege, and politics. Each chapter offers an overview of key issues in onomastics and language policy across multiple geo-cultural contexts, and applies the interdisciplinary insights to real-world policies.

This book is a valuable resource for scholars of legal linguistics, forensic linguistics, onomastics, language policy, and cultural studies.

chapter 1|18 pages

Names, Naming, Identity and the Law

A Basic Introduction

chapter 3|16 pages

Naming, Expressive Interests, and the Law

The Implications of Governmental Form Design

chapter 5|21 pages

Both And vs. Either Or

The Challenge of Official Names and Naming for the US Census in Multicultural America

chapter 6|17 pages

Applied Toponymy in the United States

A Compendium of the History and Policy Development of Geographic Names and Naming

chapter 7|16 pages

Toponomy and Law

Neighborhood Names in Legal Perspective

chapter 8|17 pages

The Law on Geographical Indications and Traditional Food Names

Protecting Local and Regional Interests in a Global Arena

chapter 9|17 pages

From Fluoxetine to Prozac®

How the Pharmaceutical Industry Builds Brand Identity through Prescription Drug Naming

chapter 10|29 pages

Naming Unnamed Diseases

Governmental Policies, Historical Practices, and Identity Repercussions

chapter 11|20 pages

The Name of the Rose (and Everything Else)

How Codes and Practices in Naming Biological Species Reflect Cultural Identities