The Oxford Handbook of Psychology and Law
Oxford University Press Inc (Verlag)
978-0-19-764913-8 (ISBN)
The Oxford Handbook of Psychology and Law fills this gap and offers an up-to-date, scholarly, and broad overview of psychology-law topics. David DeMatteo and Kyle C. Scherr have brought together a diverse group of highly esteemed applied and experimental researchers and scholars to discuss key topics in the field from both national and international perspectives. The volume is broadly divided into three sections: foundational psychology-law, applied psychology-law, and experimental-psychology-law. The Foundational Psychology-Law section includes chapters that are relevant to both applied psychology and experimental psychology, making a unique contribution that ties together the applied and experimental aspects of the field. The Applied Psychology-Law section provides coverage of topics related to the provision of forensic services (broadly defined) in criminal and civil legal contexts. Lastly, the Experimental Psychology-Law section covers empirically examined legal system issues and outcomes related to victims, offenders, witnesses, attorneys, and triers of fact.
With comprehensive coverage of both applied and experimental topic areas and chapters written by a diverse group of well-established psychology-law scholars and emerging future leaders, this Handbook presents emerging, cutting-edge topics in psychology-law that will continue to grow and meaningfully shape future research programs and policy reform.
David DeMatteo, JD, PhD, ABPP (Forensic), is a Professor of Psychology and Professor of Law at Drexel University, and Director of Drexel's JD/PhD Program in Law & Psychology. His research interests include psychopathy, forensic mental health assessment, and offender diversion, and he has published 10 books and more than 140 articles and chapters in these and other areas. He is a Fellow of the American Psychological Association, a Fellow of the American Academy of Forensic Psychology, board certified in forensic psychology by the American Board of Professional Psychology, and a former President of the American Psychology-Law Society (APA Division 41). Kyle C. Scherr, PhD, is a Professor of Psychology at Central Michigan University. His research interests include interrogation decision-making, the psychology of innocence, cognitive biases in forensic analysis, issues associated with wrongful convictions, and judgments of those exonerated of a wrongful conviction. He has published over 40 articles and book chapters in his areas of interest. His program of research has been externally funded, including a project that is currently funded by the National Science Foundation. He is an Associate Editor for the American Psychology-Law Society's flagship journal Law and Human Behavior.
Preface - David DeMatteo and Kyle C. Scherr
Foundational Psychology-Law
Chapter 1: Training for Careers in Psychology-Law - David DeMatteo and Kyle C. Scherr
Chapter 2: Influencing Policy and Procedure with Law-Psychology Research: Why, When, Where, How, and What - Brian H. Bornstein and Christian A. Meissner
Chapter 3: Preventive Justice - Christopher Slobogin
Chapter 4: Expert Psychological Testimony - Brian L. Cutler and Daniel A. Krauss
Chapter 5: Psychology and Law, Meet Open Science - Bradley D. McAuliff, Melanie B. Fessinger, Anthony D. Perillo, and Jennifer T. Perillo
Applied Psychology-Law
Part I: General Considerations
Chapter 6: A Framework for Forensic Mental Health Assessments: Principles, Standards of Care, and Standards of Practice - Kirk Heilbrun, Madelena Rizzo, Kellie Wiltsie, and Heidi Zapotocky
Chapter 7: Ethics in Forensic Psychology Practice - Randy K. Otto
Chapter 8: Forensic Report Writing: Proposing a Research Agenda - Richart L. DeMier and Daniel A. Krauss
Part II: Criminal and Civil Forensic Psychology
Chapter 9: Emerging Issues in Competence to Stand Trial Evaluation - Patricia A. Zapf and Amanda Beltrani
Chapter 10: Criminal Responsibility Evaluations - Ira K. Packer and Lauren E. Kois
Chapter 11: Of Capital Importance: Considerations in Capital Sentencing Contexts - Jaymes Fairfax-Columbo, Bronwyn Neeser, Alexandra Kudatzky, and David DeMatteo
Chapter 12: Forensic Evaluation in Civil Litigation: A Case Example - Julie M. Brovko and William E. Foote
Chapter 13: Evaluating Workplace Disability - Lisa Drago Piechowski
Chapter 14: Child Custody Evaluations - Jonathan W. Gould and Christopher Mulchay
Chapter 15: Forensic Mental Health Assessment in Immigration Court - Virginia Barber-Rioja and Alexandria Garcia-Mansilla
Chapter 16: Forensic Mental Health Assessments in Juvenile Justice Contexts - Christopher M. King, Lauren Grove, Sarah Hitchcock, Kenny Gonzalez, Amanda Palardy, and Nicole Guevara
Chapter 17: Neuropsychological Considerations in Forensic Mental Health Assessment - Casey LaDuke, Chriscelyn M. Tussey, Bernice A. Marcopulos, Scott D. Bender, and Beth C. Arredondo
Chapter 18: Violence Risk Assessment and Management - Stephen D. Hart and Kevin S. Douglas
Chapter 19: Response Styles Within the Forensic Context: Conceptual Issues and Assessment Methods - Richard Rogers and Minqi Pan
Chapter 20: How Reliable and Objective are Forensic Mental Health Evaluators? - Daniel C. Murrie and Marcus T. Boccaccini
Part III: Consultation and Intervention
Chapter 21: Trial Consultation - Eric Y. Drogin and Leigh D. Hagan
Chapter 22: Managerial Justice, Community Supervision, and Treatment Mandates: The Intersection of Clinical Practice and Social Control - Benjamin J. Mackey, JoAnn Lee, CJ Appleton, Sarah Skidmore, and Faye S. Taxman
Chapter 23: Treating Justice-Involved Populations with Severe Mental Illness - Robert D. Morgan, Faith Scanlon, Jessica Mattera, and McCown Leggett
Chapter 24: Key Considerations for Pre-arrest Diversion Programs - David S. Festinger, Jessica L. Lipkin, Daniel J. Flack, David DeMatteo, and Karen L. Dugosh
Chapter 25: Rehabilitative Justice: Problem-Solving Courts - Shelby Arnold, Alice Thornewill, Kirk Heilbrun, and David DeMatteo
Experimental Psychology-Law
Part I: Witnesses and Victims
Chapter 26: The Emerging Investigative Practice of Tele-Forensic Interviewing: Implications for Children's Testimony - Jason J. Dickinson, Nicole E. Lytle, and Debra Ann Poole
Chapter 27: Using Reflector Variables to Determine Whether the Culprit is Present in or Absent from a Police Lineup - Andrew M. Smith and Gary L. Wells
Chapter 28: Interviewing Cooperative Forensic Witnesses and Mediation: Areas of Overlap and Potential for Future Research - Deborah Goldfarb and Ronald P. Fisher
Chapter 29: Emerging Policy Issues Related to Sexual Violence in Higher Education:
Investigation and Adjudication Procedures and Mandatory Reporting Policies - Allison E. Cipriano and Kathryn J. Holland
Chapter 30: Legal Decision Making Among Youth Defendants, Victims, and Witnesses: Emerging Issues, Research, and Theory - Lindsay C. Malloy, Joshua Wyman, Shreya Mukhopadhyay, and Jodi A. Quas
Chapter 31: Why Seeing the Big Picture in the Study of Public Safety is Necessary for Combatting Racism Within It - Gwen Prowse and Phillip Atiba Goff
Part II: Evidence Gathering and Pursuit in Criminal Cases
Chapter 32: Procedural Justice Theory: Challenges and New Extensions - Ben Bradford, Arabella Kyprianides, and Julia A. Yesberg
Chapter 33: The Present and Future of Verbal Lie Detection - Aldert Vrij, Pär Anders Granhag, Sharon Leal, Ronald P. Fisher, Steven M. Kleinman, and Tzachi Ashkenazi
Chapter 34: Investigative Interviewing: A Review of the Literature and a Model of Science-Based Practice - Christian A. Meissner, Steven M. Kleinman, Amelia Mindthoff, Erik P. Phillips, and Jesse N. Rothweiler
Chapter 35: Police Custody: A Legal Construct in Search of a Definition - Fabiana Alceste and Saul M. Kassin
Chapter 36: Human Factors in Forensic Science: Psychological Causes of Bias and Error - Jeff Kukucka and Itiel E. Dror
Chapter 37: Psychological Barriers to the Detection of Child Sexual Abuse - Nicholas Scurich and Park Dietz
Chapter 38: First Steps on the Path to Wrongful Conviction: Phenomenology of Innocence, Police Stops, and Expectancies - Max Guyll, Kyle C. Scherr, Stephanie Madon, and Jessica Munoz
Part III: Criminal Outcomes
Chapter 39: Emerging Issues in the Psycho-Legal Study of Guilty Pleas - Allison Redlich, Tina Zottoli, Amy Dezember, Ryan Schneider, Mary Catlin, and Suraiya Shammi
Chapter 40: Prosecutorial Misconduct - Margaret Bull Kovera and Melanie B. Fessinger
Chapter 41: Jury Decision Making - Lora M. Levett
Chapter 42: Emotion and Legal Judgment - Liana C. Peter-Hagene, Samantha Bean, and Jessica M. Salerno
Chapter 43: Injustice in the Courtroom: How Race and Ethnicity Affect Legal Outcomes - Jennifer S. Hunt
Chapter 44: Law, Psychology, and Wrongful Convictions - Brandon L. Garrett and William Crozier
Erscheinungsdatum | 23.01.2023 |
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Reihe/Serie | OXFORD LIBRARY OF PSYCHOLOGY SERIES |
Verlagsort | New York |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 256 x 186 mm |
Gewicht | 1642 g |
Themenwelt | Geisteswissenschaften ► Psychologie |
Studium ► 2. Studienabschnitt (Klinik) ► Rechtsmedizin | |
Recht / Steuern ► EU / Internationales Recht | |
Recht / Steuern ► Strafrecht ► Strafverfahrensrecht | |
ISBN-10 | 0-19-764913-0 / 0197649130 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-19-764913-8 / 9780197649138 |
Zustand | Neuware |
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR) | |
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