Bibliographic Information

Psychology & the legal system

Lawrence S. Wrightsman, Michael T. Nietzel, William H. Fortune

Brooks/Cole Pub. Co., c1998

4th ed

Other Title

Psychology and the legal system

Available at  / 4 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 505-542) and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Examines the legal system through the use of psychological concepts, methods, and research results. The text seeks to clarify the basic dilemmas that persist in the legal system and looks at the ethical, moral, legal, and psychological "gray areas" of the law including coverage of such topics as: competence to stand trial; pretrial publicity and resulting changes in venue; criminal profiling; civil case law and civil procedures; the rights of children; capital punishment; the psychology of criminal trials; the insanity defense; expert forensic testimony; and analysis of eyewitness identification and lineup procedures. This edition balances discussion of the legal system with psychological theory, concepts, and research.

Table of Contents

  • Psychology and the law - impossible choices
  • psychologists and the legal system
  • legality, morality, and justice
  • lawyers - socialization, training, and ethics
  • theories of crime
  • the police and the criminal justice system
  • crime investigation - eyewitnesses
  • identification and evaluation of criminal suspects
  • the rights of victims and the rights of the accused
  • between arrest and trial
  • forensic assessment I
  • forensic assessment II
  • the trial process
  • jury trials - jury representativeness and selection
  • jury trials - assumptions and reforms
  • crime victims
  • the rights of special groups
  • punishment and sentencing.

by "Nielsen BookData"

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