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Investigative Interviewing [electronic resource] / edited by Ray Bull.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 2014Edition: 1st ed. 2014Description: XIX, 245 p. 6 illus. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781461496427
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 150.72 23
LOC classification:
  • BF76.5
Online resources:
Contents:
Investigative interviewing of sex offenders -- Psychological processes underlying true and false confessions -- Cops and question kids in the interrogation room -- Between investigator and suspect: The role of the working alliance in investigative interviewing -- Interview techniques in International Criminal Court and Tribunals -- A training program for investigative interviewing of children -- Success within criminal investigations: Is communication still a key component? -- Investigative interviewing and training: The investigative interviewer apprentice -- When in interviews to disclose information to suspects and to challenge them? -- The inconsistent suspect: A systematic review of different types of consistency in truth tellers and liars -- Human intelligence interviewing and interrogation: Assessing the challenges of developing an ethical, evidence-based approach -- Prosecutors’ perceptions on improving child witness interviews about abuse.
In: Springer Nature eBookSummary: Between news stories of coerced confessions and the over-the-top interrogations shown in crime dramas, there seems to be no end of wrong ways to question suspects. And as wrong as these methods are, they are equally counterproductive when the resulting statements are based on questioners' assumptions rather than the truth. The expert pages of Investigative Interviewing model an approach that reflects an ethical base – emphasizing persuasion rather than coercion – as well as the evidence base. International in scope, this innovative volume reflects sophisticated new interview methods and often surprising findings on the psychology of suspects, victims, witnesses, and law enforcement personnel. Topics cross criminal justice settings and contexts, such as when information should be disclosed to suspects, how interviews are conducted in international tribunals, and the emerging concept of human intelligence interviewing. Taken together, these chapters are a leading-edge guide to obtaining statements that stand up as reliable evidence. Included in the coverage:   Investigative interviewing of sex offenders. Psychological processes underlying true and false confessions. Between investigator and suspect: the role of the working alliance in investigative interviewing. A training program for investigative interviewing of children.  A systematic review of different types of consistency in truth tellers and liars. Prosecutors’ perceptions on improving child witness interviews about abuse. Suited to the researcher and the educator as well as the frontline professional, Investigative Interviewing heralds a major advance in forensics: education and training programs rooted in best practices for more effective interviewing--and consigning excessive interrogations to the fiction writers.
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Investigative interviewing of sex offenders -- Psychological processes underlying true and false confessions -- Cops and question kids in the interrogation room -- Between investigator and suspect: The role of the working alliance in investigative interviewing -- Interview techniques in International Criminal Court and Tribunals -- A training program for investigative interviewing of children -- Success within criminal investigations: Is communication still a key component? -- Investigative interviewing and training: The investigative interviewer apprentice -- When in interviews to disclose information to suspects and to challenge them? -- The inconsistent suspect: A systematic review of different types of consistency in truth tellers and liars -- Human intelligence interviewing and interrogation: Assessing the challenges of developing an ethical, evidence-based approach -- Prosecutors’ perceptions on improving child witness interviews about abuse.

Between news stories of coerced confessions and the over-the-top interrogations shown in crime dramas, there seems to be no end of wrong ways to question suspects. And as wrong as these methods are, they are equally counterproductive when the resulting statements are based on questioners' assumptions rather than the truth. The expert pages of Investigative Interviewing model an approach that reflects an ethical base – emphasizing persuasion rather than coercion – as well as the evidence base. International in scope, this innovative volume reflects sophisticated new interview methods and often surprising findings on the psychology of suspects, victims, witnesses, and law enforcement personnel. Topics cross criminal justice settings and contexts, such as when information should be disclosed to suspects, how interviews are conducted in international tribunals, and the emerging concept of human intelligence interviewing. Taken together, these chapters are a leading-edge guide to obtaining statements that stand up as reliable evidence. Included in the coverage:   Investigative interviewing of sex offenders. Psychological processes underlying true and false confessions. Between investigator and suspect: the role of the working alliance in investigative interviewing. A training program for investigative interviewing of children.  A systematic review of different types of consistency in truth tellers and liars. Prosecutors’ perceptions on improving child witness interviews about abuse. Suited to the researcher and the educator as well as the frontline professional, Investigative Interviewing heralds a major advance in forensics: education and training programs rooted in best practices for more effective interviewing--and consigning excessive interrogations to the fiction writers.

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