04886nam 2200637 a 450 991083049630332120230617011806.01-280-27148-5978047086222X0-470-86222-X0-470-01339-7(CKB)111087027142136(EBL)155663(OCoLC)52595810(SSID)ssj0000168196(PQKBManifestationID)11161759(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000168196(PQKBWorkID)10191999(PQKB)10410730(MiAaPQ)EBC155663(EXLCZ)9911108702714213620020814d2003 uy 0engur|n|---|||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierHandbook of psychology in legal contexts[electronic resource] /edited by David Carson and Ray Bull2nd ed.Chichester ;Hoboken, NJ J. Wileyc20031 online resource (690 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-471-49874-2 Includes bibliographical references and index.Handbook of Psychology in Legal Contexts Second Edition; Contents; About the Editors; List of Contributors; Preface; Introduction Psychology and Law: A Subdiscipline, an Interdisciplinary Collaboration or a Project?; PART 1 PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENTS FOR THE COURTS; Chapter 1.1 Adults' Capacity to Make Legal Decisions; Chapter 1.2 The Assessment and Detection of Deceit; Chapter 1.3 Assessing Individuals for Compensation; PART 2 PERSPECTIVES ON SYSTEMS: PSYCHOLOGY IN ACTION; Chapter 2.1 Interviewing by the Police; Chapter 2.2 Violence Risk: From Prediction to ManagementChapter 2.3 Risk: The Need for and Benefits of an Interdisciplinary PerspectiveChapter 2.4 Beyond 'Offender Profiling': The Need for an Investigative Psychology; Chapter 2.5 Uses, Misuses and Implications for Crime Data; Chapter 2.6 Crime Prevention; Chapter 2.7 The Development of Delinquent Behaviour; Chapter 2.8 Children in Disputes; Chapter 2.9 Child Defendants and the Law; PART 3 PERSPECTIVES ON COURTS: TRIALS AND DECISION MAKING; Chapter 3.1 Juror Decision-Making in the Twenty-First Century: Confronting Science and Technology in Court; Chapter 3.2 Assessing Evidence: Proving FactsChapter 3.3 Advocacy: Getting the Answers You WantChapter 3.4 Expert Evidence: The Rules and the Rationality the Law Applies (or Should Apply) to Psychological Expertise; Chapter 3.5 Decision Making by Juries and Judges: International Perspectives; Chapter 3.6 Restorative Justice: The Influence of Psychology from a Jurisprudent Therapy Perspective; Chapter 3.7 Proactive Judges: Solving Problems and Transforming Communities; PART 4 PERSPECTIVES ON POLICY: PSYCHOLOGY AND PUBLIC DEBATE; Chapter 4.1 Drugs, Crime and the Law: An Attributional PerspectiveChapter 4.2 Psychological Research and Lawyers' Perceptions of Child Witnesses in Sexual Abuse TrialsChapter 4.3 Alleged Child Sexual Abuse and Expert Testimony: A Swedish Perspective; Chapter 4.4 Eyewitnesses; Chapter 4.5 Psychological and Legal Implications of Occupational Stress for Criminal Justice Practitioners; Chapter 4.6 Therapeutic Jurisprudence: An Invitation to Social Scientists; PART 5 LEGAL PSYCHOLOGY, PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE AND SOCIETY; Chapter 5.1 Methodology: Law's Adopting and Adapting to Psychology's Methods and FindingsChapter 5.2 Interviewing and Assessing Clients from Different Cultural Backgrounds: Guidelines for all Forensic ProfessionalsChapter 5.3 Psychology and Law: A Behavioural or a Social Science?; Table of Cases; Table of Statutes; IndexThe second edition of this popular international handbook highlights the developing relationship between psychology and the law. Consisting of all-new material and drawing on the work of practitioners and academics from the UK, Europe, North America and elsewhere, this volume looks not only at the more traditional elements of psychology and the law - the provision of psychological assessments about individuals to the courts - but also many of the recent developments, such as the interaction between psychologists and other professionals, decision-making by judges and juries, and the shaping ofLawPsychological aspectsForensic psychologyLawPsychological aspects.Forensic psychology.340.19347.066019347/.066/019Carson David1950-1622654Bull Ray1593427MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910830496303321Handbook of psychology in legal contexts3956641UNINA