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Applying Psychology to Criminal Justice
 
 
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Applying Psychology to Criminal Justice [Hardcover]

David Carson (Editor), Rebecca Milne (Editor), Francis Pakes (Editor), Karen Shalev (Editor), Andrea Shawyer (Editor)

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Book Description

September 25, 2007 0470015152 978-0470015155 1
Few things should go together better than psychology and law - and few things are getting together less successfully. Edited by four psychologists and a lawyer, and drawing on contributions from Europe, the USA and Australia, Applying Psychology to Criminal Justice argues that psychology should be applied more widely within the criminal justice system. Contributors develop the case for successfully applying psychology to justice by providing a rich range of applicable examples for development now and in the future. Readers are encouraged to challenge the limited ambition and imagination of psychology and law by examining how insights in areas such as offender cognition and decision-making under pressure might inform future investigation and analysis.

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Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover

This essential volume, edited by four psychologists and a lawyer, argues that psychology can, and should be, applied more widely, particularly within the criminal justice system.

Psychology and Law has made enormous strides during the last three decades. It now incorporates a much wider range of topics and has seen a marked international growth in specialist journals, books and conferences. The focus, until now, has been on research and academic membership rather than on practical applications and participation by practitioners, psychologists or lawyers, something this volume aims to change.

This book develops the case for successfully applying psychology to law, and criminal justice in particular, by providing a rich range of applicable examples for development, now and in the future. In Applying Psychology to Criminal Justice psychologists are encouraged to challenge the currently relatively limited ambition and imagination of psychology and law by examining, amongst other aspects:

  • The relevance of offenders’ methods of thinking and concepts to criminal responsibility
  • The ways in which psychology might be used to inform analyses of corporate responsibility for systems failure
  • How analyses of decision-making under pressure are most effectively undertaken
  • How psychological research and insights might be applied to the investigation and analysis of system failure.

This text is an important addition to the bookshelves of forensic, legal, clinical, and occupational psychologists, students, and criminal justice personnel: police, probation, prisons. Also essential reading for investigators, lawyers, law reform agencies, and those government departments concerned with home, constitutional, law reform agendas.

Contributors

Laurence Alison, UK

Ray Bull, UK

Susan Dennison, Australia

Leslie Ellis, USA

Jacey Erickson, USA

Marie Eyre, UK

Ronald Fisher, USA

Edie Greene, USA

John G. D. Grieve, UK

Kirk Heilbrun, USA

Peter van Koppen, The Netherlands

Jenny McEwan, UK

Becky Milne, UK

Francis Pakes, The Netherlands/UK

Emma Palmer, UK

Margaret Reardon, USA

Gary Shaw, UK

Aldert Vrij, UK

Jane Winstone, UK

About the Author

All of the editors are based at the Institute of Criminal Justice Studies at Portsmouth University, which is the UK’s largest provider of criminal justice courses. David Carson is Reader in Law and Behavioural Sciences and is qualified as a lawyer. Becky Milne and Francis Pakes are both senior lecturers at the Institute. Karen Shalev is a lecturer, and Andrea Shawyer is a university tutor.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
lie detection tools, new evidence scholarship, critical incident managers, other behavioural scientists, fact finding and evidence, subjective mens rea, decision avoidance, mock witnesses, eyewitness identification evidence, offending behaviour programmes, anticipated blame, investigative interviewing, known error rate, civil law concepts, eyewitness identification procedures, investigative psychology, inquisitorial justice, anchored narratives, estimator variables, hindsight bias, cognitive interview, context reinstatement, eyewitness confidence, applying psychology, mock jurors
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Home Office, New York, Oxford University Press, New Zealand, David Carson, Cambridge University Press, Francis Pakes, John Wiley, Royal Commission, Rebecca Milne, Handbook of Psychology, Department of Health, Journal of Applied Psychology, Behavioral Sciences, University of Portsmouth, American Psychological Association, Mental Health Act, Northern Ireland, Stephen Lawrence Inquiry, Validity Checklist, Court of Appeal, Psychological Bulletin, Crown Prosecution Service, Saudi Arabia, Think First
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