Psychology and law in Europe : when West meets East

Author(s)

    • Granhag, Pär Anders
    • Shaboltas, Alla
    • Dozortseva, Elena

Bibliographic Information

Psychology and law in Europe : when West meets East

edited by Pär-Anders Granhag ... [et al.]

CRC Press, c2017

  • : hard

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Offering carefully curated articles from the European Association of Psychology and Law (EAPL), this book features chapters from a truly international group of scholars. This text is the first of its kind to offer insights into current developments in psychology and law in Russia. The field of psychology and law has a very long and strong tradition in Russia, but very little is known, as Russian scholars rarely publish their works in English. The volume also contains state-of-the-art chapters on topics at the very core of psychology and law, including offender profiling, lie detection, crime linking, false memories, and witness interviewing. Features Provides rare insight into Russian history of forensic and criminal psychology Covers core topics in the discipline Offers international scope from a diverse array of contributors Psychology and Law in Europe: When West Meets East is a text of interest for students of psychology, law, or criminal justice, as well as scholars and practitioners in the field. This text offers a window into global advances in psychology and law.

Table of Contents

Introduction P. A. Granhag, R. Bull, A. Shaboltas and E. Dozortseva Section 1: Setting the stage 1. Forensic and criminal psychology in Russia: History of development and current state A. Shaboltas 2. Legal consciousness: The nervous chord of a legal system D. I. Lukovskaya and M. A. Kapustina 3. The origin of the paternalistic tradition in Russian social consciousness M. I. Yudina Section 2: Crimes: Sex and money 4. Lay thinking about sexual murderer and victim in groups of young Russian men and women N. Dvoryanchikov, I. Bovina, O. Logunova and A. Gutnick 5. Assumptions underlying behavioral linkage revisited: ascertaining individual differentiation and consistency in serial rape M. Sorochinski and C.G. Salfati 6. Victims or "fighters"? Narratives of abused women who killed their male intimate partners P. S. Pereira 7. Mock jurors' understanding of forensic science and its perceived importance in judicial processes L. Hammond and M. Ioannou 8. Dysfunctional economic behaviour: Victims of financial debt (the case of microfinance organization clients) O. Deyneka Section 3: Personality: Psychopathy and risk taking 9. Problem personalities in the workplace: Development of the Corporate Personality Inventory K. Fritzon, C. Bailey, S. Croom and N. Brooks 10. How moral emotions affect the probability of relapse A. Koerner, R. Schindler and T. Hahnemann 11. Personality traits of juveniles convicted of sexual assault G. A. Vartanyan and S. V. Gorbatov 12. Risk-taking behaviour, values and attitudes towards traffic safety among street racers in St. Petersburg J. V. Granskaya and V. A. Zaicev Section 4: Interviewing, memory and deception 13. The eye-closure interview: the practical utility of instructing eyewitnesses to close their eyes A .Vredeveldt and C. G. Tredoux 14. Understanding false memories: Dominant scientific theories and explanatory mechanisms J. Shaw 15. Verbal lie detection A. Vrij and G. Nahari

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