Fr. 180.00

Beyond Common Sense - Psychological Science in the Courtroom

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Eugene Borgida is Professor of Psychology and Law at the University of Minnesota and Morse-Alumni Distinguished Professor of Psychology. He is also co-author of the forthcoming book, The Political Psychology of Democratic Citizenship (with John L. Sullivan and Christopher Federico). Susan T. Fiske is Eugene Higgins Professor of Psychology at Princeton University. Her publications include Social Cognition : From Brains to Culture (with Shelley Taylor, 2008) and Social Beings: A Core Motives Approach to Social Psychology (2004). Klappentext Psychological science challenges and sometimes contradicts common sense ideas about stereotyping, prejudice, discrimination, and other behavioral domains that intersect with legal processes such as eyewitness identification, repressed memories, polygraph testing, and affirmative action. Beyond Common Sense confronts the public's often erroneous beliefs about human behavior in legal contexts like the courtroom. Featuring original chapters written by leading experts in psychological science, each chapter identifies areas of scientific agreement and disagreement and discusses how psychological science advances an understanding of human behavior beyond what is accessible by common sense and intuitive beliefs. The book concludes with commentaries written by leading social science and law scholars that discuss key legal and scientific themes and illustrate how psychological science is, or can be, used in the courts and in other policy contexts. Zusammenfassung Beyond Common Sense addresses the many important and controversial issues that arise from the use of psychological and social science in the courtroom. Each chapter identifies areas of scientific agreement and disagreement! and discusses how psychological science advances our understanding of human behavior beyond common sense. Inhaltsverzeichnis Notes on Contributors. Foreword ( Mahzarin R. Banaji ). Acknowledgments. Introduction ( Eugene Borgida and Susan T. Fiske ). Part I Psychological Science on Stereotyping, Prejudice, and Discrimination. 1 Race, Crime, and Antidiscrimination ( R. Richard Banks, Jennifer L. Eberhardt, and Lee Ross ). 2 Discrimination in America and Legal Strategies for Reducing It ( Faye J. Crosby and John F. Dovidio ). 3 The Young Science of Prejudice Against Older Adults: Established Answers and Open Questions About Ageism ( Todd D. Nelson ). 4 Gender Prejudice: On the Risks of Occupying Incongruent Roles ( Alice H. Eagly and Anne M. Koenig ). 5 From the Laboratory to the Bench: Gender Stereotyping Research in the Courtroom ( Laurie A. Rudman, Peter Glick, and Julie E. Phelan ). 6 (Un)common Knowledge: The Legal Viability of Sexual Harassment Research ( Louise F. Fitzgerald and Linda L. Collinsworth ). 7 Subjectivity in the Appraisal Process: A Facilitator of Gender Bias in Work Settings ( Madeline E. Heilman and Michelle C. Haynes ). Part II Psychological Science on Legal System Processes. 8 Eyewitness Identifi cation: Issues in Common Knowledge and Generalization ( Gary L. Wells and Lisa E. Hasel ). 9 Repressed and Recovered Memory ( Elizabeth F. Loftus, Maryanne Garry, and Harlene Hayne ). 10 Expert Testimony on the Psychology of Confessions: A Pyramidal Framework of the Relevant Science ( Saul M. Kassin ). 11 Polygraph Testing ( William G. Iacono ). 12 Social Science and the Evolving Standards of Death Penalty Law ( Phoebe C. Ellsworth and Samuel R. Gross ). 13 Pretrial Publicity: Effects, Remedies, and Judicial Knowledge ( Margaret Bull Kovera and Sarah M. Greathouse ). 14 Media Violence, Aggression, and Public Policy ( Craig A. Anderson and Douglas A. Gentile ).<...

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