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English
Routledge
30 November 2020
The recent explosion of research and practice relating to offending and the related investigative and legal processes makes it extremely difficult for anyone to master these emerging areas of research. This book will help readers to navigate through this rapidly expanding area of scholarship and practice by bringing together a number of recent reviews on key topics by leading experts in the field.

Contributions to the volume discuss developments in the study of interviewing and the detection of deception together with explorations of victims and offenders. The psychological background and consequences of school bullying, child sexual abuse and male rape are also explored, as are the challenges of collecting information about crimes as varied as burglary and serial killing.

This book will be a valuable resource for criminologists, crime and forensic psychologists, students of socio-legal processes and all those involved in legal and investigative activities.

The chapters in this book were originally published as review articles in Crime Psychology Review.
Edited by:   , ,
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 246mm,  Width: 174mm, 
Weight:   902g
ISBN:   9780367365462
ISBN 10:   0367365464
Pages:   420
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Primary ,  A / AS level
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Introduction: Reviewing Crime Psychology 1. A review of the collective interviewing approach to detecting deception 2. Drawing-based deception detection techniques: a state-of-the-art review 3. Systematic errors (biases) in applying verbal lie detection tools: richness in detail as a test case 4. A review of the polygraph: history, methodology and current status 5. Veracity assessment: aspects of the account, the source and the judge that influence judgements of plausibility 6. A systematic review on factors affecting the likelihood of change blindness 7. A review of eyewitness identification in the United States: problems and policies 8. Whistle-blowing in American police agencies 9. The CSI effect and its controversial existence and impact: a mixed methods review 10. Childhood victimization and prostitution: A developmental victimology perspective 11. Schizophrenia and violence: realities and recommendations 12. The origin of sexual homicide: a review 13. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, impulsivity, and low self-control: which is most useful in understanding and preventing offending? 14. Environmental factors in juvenile delinquency: A systematic review of the situational perspectives’ literature 15. Comparing factors related to school-bullying and cyber-bullying 16. Male rape: what we know, don’t know and need to find out—a critical review 17. Third-party responses to injustice: a review on the preference for compensation 18. Measuring offending: self-reports, official records, systematic observation and experimentation 19. Addressing the challenges and limitations of utilizing data to study serial homicide 20. Disclosure of Child Sexual Abuse: A Review of Factors that Impact Proceedings in the Courtroom

David Canter is an Emeritus Professor at the University of Liverpool, UK. Internationally known for developing the emerging field of Investigative Psychology, he has published widely on many aspects of social, environmental and forensic psychology. His book Criminal Shadows (1994) was awarded the Golden Dagger and Anthony Awards for crime non-fiction. He also wrote and presented a six-part TV documentary series on his work in geographical offender profiling, which was later published as his book Mapping Murder (2003). Donna Youngs is a Reader in Psychology at the University of Huddersfield, UK, where she directs the doctoral program in Investigative Psychology. She has published on many aspects of criminality and criminal psychology. Her particular interests are in criminals’ personal narratives and their experiences of crime.

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