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Judges told to avoid referring to ‘Jews’ in court

New advice from Judicial College includes advice for judges on dealing with people from a Jewish background

February 28, 2018 16:44
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1 min read

 

Judges should refrain from referring to a person as “a Jew” and instead describe them in court as a “Jewish person”, according to new advice from the organisation responsible for training the judiciary.

In the latest edition of its Equal Treatment Bench Book, the Judicial College includes direction on the sensitive use of language in courts of law - and concludes that terminology once used to determine an individual’s racial or ethnic background is no longer acceptable.

In guidance to judges who are dealing with people from a Jewish background, the Equal Treatment Bench Book states: “It is better to say ‘Jewish person’ or ‘Jewish people’ than ‘Jews’ or, worse, ‘a Jew’.

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