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Beliefs and Expectancies in Legal Decision Making

Book

Beliefs and Expectancies in Legal Decision Making

DOI link for Beliefs and Expectancies in Legal Decision Making

Beliefs and Expectancies in Legal Decision Making book

Beliefs and Expectancies in Legal Decision Making

DOI link for Beliefs and Expectancies in Legal Decision Making

Beliefs and Expectancies in Legal Decision Making book

Edited ByBradley McAuliff, Brian Bornstein
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2015
eBook Published 1 April 2016
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315749938
Pages 144
eBook ISBN 9781315749938
Subjects Behavioral Sciences, Social Sciences
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McAuliff, B., & Bornstein, B. (Eds.). (2015). Beliefs and Expectancies in Legal Decision Making (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315749938

ABSTRACT

Beliefs and expectancies influence our everyday thoughts, feelings, and actions. These attributes make a closer examination of beliefs and expectancies worthwhile in any context, but particularly so within the high-stakes arena of the legal system. Whether the decision maker is a police officer assessing the truthfulness of an alibi, a juror evaluating the accuracy of an eyewitness identification, an attorney arguing a case involving a juvenile offender, or a judge deciding whether to terminate parental rights—these decisions matter and without doubt are influenced by beliefs and expectancies. This volume is comprised of research on beliefs and expectancies regarding alibis, children’s behaviour while testifying, eyewitness testimony, confessions, sexual assault victims, judges’ decisions in child protection cases, and attorneys’ beliefs about jurors’ perceptions of juvenile offender culpability. Areas for future research are identified, and readers are encouraged to discover new ways that beliefs and expectancies operate in the legal system.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Psychology, Crime & Law.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|10 pages

Beliefs and expectancies in legal decision making: an introduction

ByBradley D. McAuliff, Brian H. Bornstein

chapter 2|16 pages

Beliefs about alibis and alibi investigations: a survey of law enforcement

ByJennifer E. Dysart, Deryn Strange

chapter 3|22 pages

Do jurors get what they expect? Traditional versus alternative forms of children’s testimony

ByBradley D. McAuliff, Margaret Bull Kovera

chapter 4|16 pages

The effects of mock jurors’ beliefs about eyewitness performance on trial judgments

ByTess M.S. Neal, Ashley Christiansen, Brian H. Bornstein and Timothy R. Robicheaux

chapter 5|14 pages

Minimization and maximization techniques: assessing the perceived consequences of confessing and confession diagnosticity

ByAllyson J. Horgan, Melissa B. Russano, Christian A. Meissner, Jacqueline R. Evans

chapter 6|16 pages

Perceptions of sexual assault: expectancies regarding the emotional response of a rape victim over time

ByMarc A. Klippenstine, Regina Schuller

chapter 7|18 pages

Terminating parental rights: the relation of judicial experience and expectancy-related factors to risk perceptions in child protection cases

ByAlicia Summers, Sophia Gatowski, Shirley Dobbin

chapter 8|16 pages

Attorney and lay beliefs about factors affecting jurors’ perceptions of juvenile offender culpability

ByCatherine R. Camilletti, Matthew H. Scullin
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