Encyclopedia of Psychology and Law
In both instances, the Court held there was no vio- lation of due process. Michael L. Perlin See also Criminal Responsibility, A ...
As hostage negotiation developed over the decades of the 1970s and 1980s, it was observed that the major- ity of negotiator inci ...
as well as coordinating the dispatch and arrival of the local power/utility company crew (in the event the tac- tical commander ...
visible tactical containment combined with the third component, the presentation of face-saving issues, becomes the most integra ...
Fuselier, G. D. (1988). Hostage negotiation consultant: Emerging role for the clinical psychologist. Professional Psychology: Re ...
Personal Factors Vulnerability to adverse critical incident stress out- comes has been linked to, for example, preexisting psych ...
a significant amount of time occurs between observa- tion of the perpetrator and a test of the witness’s mem- ory. While the CRE ...
the moderating factors discussed above). Along these lines, researchers have examined whether mistaken eyewitness identification ...
appear to be processed in a more configural manner (consistent with expert-level processing), while other- race faces are proces ...
Arizona, jurors in a murder trial voiced concern that a bloody coat introduced as evidence had not been tested for DNA, even tho ...
Further Readings Tyler, T. R. (2006). Viewing CSIand the threshold of guilt: Managing truth and justice in reality and fiction. ...
and Type II cybercrime, which has a more pronounced human element. The following is a brief description of some of the major typ ...
traditional relationship between physical context and social situations, and this is coupled with perceived anonymity, access, a ...
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181 DAMAGEAWARDS Damage awards function as a remedy for wrongdoing in civil lawsuits; they constitute money awarded to an injure ...
disfigurement. For example, after the drug manufac- turer Merck was found liable for the death of a Houston man who had been tak ...
The second concern is that juries are biased against wealthy defendants, including large corporations, and act as a sort of “equ ...
values to each of these components, and then sum- ming them to arrive at a total compensatory damage award. Jurors are forced to ...
Further Readings Broeder, D. (1959). The University of Chicago jury project. Nebraska Law Review, 38,744–760. Diamond, S., Saks, ...
Evaluations of structural reliability have reported Cronbach’s alpha averaging about .75 to .80, and evaluations of short-term t ...
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