
ISBN13: | 9781032475271 |
ISBN10: | 1032475277 |
Kötéstípus: | Puhakötés |
Terjedelem: | 342 oldal |
Méret: | 246x174 mm |
Súly: | 140 g |
Nyelv: | angol |
489 |
The Routledge International Handbook of Legal and Investigative Psychology
GBP 43.99
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The Routledge International Handbook of Legal and Investigative Psychology brings together some of the world?s leading experts in forensic sciences in a single comprehensive and authoritative volume.
The Routledge International Handbook of Legal and Investigative Psychology explores contemporary topics in psychological science, applying them to investigative and legal procedures. Written by recognized scholars from around the globe, this book brings together current research, emerging trends, and cutting-edge debates in a single comprehensive and authoritative volume.
Drawing from both research and practice, this handbook highlights many important issues such as: how to investigate and prosecute rape; the value of emotional affect in homicide investigations; and factors affecting jurors? and suspects? decision making. By considering current research, the authors inform both legal and investigative professionals of findings that are of direct relevance to them, and the steps that can be taken to improve efficiency.
This collection will inform investigative and legal professionals, advanced psychology students, academics, researchers, and policy makers. It will also be of great interest to researchers from other disciplines, including criminology, policing, and law.
"Whether struggling for accountability for major human rights abuses or trying to save an innocent client from a serious miscarriage of justice, sooner or later a lawyer is confronted with problems of evidence, particularly in assessing credibility of witnesses, reliability of memory, and psychological effects of various forms of coercion. This remarkable volume by world-renowned specialists offers practitioners the most up-to-date findings of science on the complex relationship between psychology and the law." - Juan E Méndez, Professor of Human Rights Law in Residence, Washington College of Law, Washington, USA."Editors Ray Bull and Iris Blandón-Gitlin and their authors deliver readable and up-to-date overviews of the state of psychological research on legally-relevant topics. This timely and accessible volume is written for investigative and legal professionals and students with an interest in psycho-legal research such as eyewitness evidence, jury competence, lie detection strategies, crime scene analysis, stalking, and false memories. Investigative interviewing is given extended treatment with chapters touching on the right to silence, interview strategies, establishing cooperation, eliciting information, avoiding bias, and training-as well as chapters focusing on sexual assault, minority suspects, and the use of interpreters. A rich and engaging new resource!" ? Steven Penrod, John Jay college, City University of New York, USA
List of Contributors
Introduction
Ray Bull and Iris Blandon-Gitlin
- The Right to Remain Silent: Realities and Illusions
- Roar or ?PEACE?: Is it a ?Tall Story??
- True and False Memories in Forensic Contexts
- Investigating and Prosecuting Rape: Victim and Criminal Justice Professionals? Perspectives
- The Probative Value of Emotional Affect in Homicide Investigations
- Investigative Decision Making
- Cognitive Fluency in the Courtroom
- Interviewing and Interrogating Minority Suspects: Psychological Science Can Help Improve the Process and Outcomes
- Interpreters in Investigative Contexts
- Impact of Alcohol and other Drugs on Eyewitness Memory
- Lay Participation in Legal Decision Making
- Police Interviewing of Sexual Assault Victims: Current Organisational Responses and Recommendations for Improvement
- Reviewing the use of Crime Linkage Evidence within a Legal Context
- The Verifiability Approach: Advances, Challenges, and Future Prospects
- Emotion ? Internal and External Consequences for Legal Authorities
- Stalking: How Perceptions differ from Reality and why these Differences matter by Adrian J. Scott
- Establishing cooperation and eliciting information: Semi-cooperative sources? affective resistance and cognitive strategies
- Evidence of Identification from Eyewitnesses
- From the Ivory Tower to the Interrogation Room: Training and Field Evaluation Research on Suspect Interviewing
- Introducing Psychology to the Justice System in Taiwan
Saul M. Kassin, Kyle C. Scherr and Fabiana Alceste
Ray Bull
Iris Blandon-Gitlin and Elise Fenn
Emma Sleath
Emily V. Shaw, Jennifer Gongola, Jennifer Teitcher and Nicholas Scurich
Karl Ask and Ivar Fahsing
Eryn Newman, Madeline Jalbert, and Neal Feigenson
Elise Fenn, Catherine Grosz and Iris Blandon-Gitlin
Jacqueline Evans, Sarah Shaffer and Dave Walsh
Heather D. Flowe, Melissa F. Colloff, Lilian Kloft, Theodore Jores and Laura M. Stevens
Margaret Bull Kovera and Lora M. Levett
Nina J. Westera, Martine B. Powell, Rebecca Milne and Jane Goodman-Delahunty
Kari Davies, Jessica Woodhams, Matthew Tonkin
Galit Nahari and Aldert Vrij
Annika Melinder, Chiara Mirandola, and Livia Gilstrap
Simon Oleszkiewicz and Pär Anders Granhag
Colin Tredoux and Jacques Py
Melissa B. Russano, Christopher E. Kelly, and Christian A. Meissner
Yee