Building rapport is considered important in investigative interviewing of children about alleged sexual abuse, but theoretical understanding of the nature of rapport and how to judge its presence remains sketchy. This article argues that the conversation analytic concept of progressivity may provide empirical tractability to the concept of rapport and indeed may be partially what people are detecting when they judge the presence of rapport. A single case is analysed, drawn from a corpus of 11 video-taped interviews with children conducted by police in an Australian sexual crime unit. Analysis focuses on how the interviewer responds when progressivity breaks down, and how restoration is collaboratively achieved. Findings are discussed in ter...
Four studies examined the investigative interviewing of children. Their purpose was to consider the ...
Police interviews (n = 97) with 5- to 13-year-olds alleging multiple incidents of sexual abuse were ...
Police interviews (n=97) with 5- to 13-year-olds alleging multiple incidents of sexual abuse were ex...
Although there is now a significant body of psychological literature examining the investigative int...
Research shows that both utterance type and rapport-building can affect children’s productivity duri...
The rapport building phase of child investigative interviewing is referred to in practice guidelines...
Two socioemotional factors were explored in association with children’s production of forensic infor...
Two socioemotional factors were explored in association with children’s production of forensic infor...
Objective: The aim of the research was to analyse interviewer practice in investigative interviews, ...
Young people suspected of being sexually exploited are unlikely to have made prior disclosures befor...
Rapport-building is key in child investigative interviews, however, recommendations of how to build ...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
In the United Kingdom alone, it is estimated that between 550,000 - 850,000 individuals pose varying...
Supportive forensic interviews conducted in accordance with the National Institute of Child Health a...
According to the Home Office Memorandum (1992), a rapport-building phase should always be included a...
Four studies examined the investigative interviewing of children. Their purpose was to consider the ...
Police interviews (n = 97) with 5- to 13-year-olds alleging multiple incidents of sexual abuse were ...
Police interviews (n=97) with 5- to 13-year-olds alleging multiple incidents of sexual abuse were ex...
Although there is now a significant body of psychological literature examining the investigative int...
Research shows that both utterance type and rapport-building can affect children’s productivity duri...
The rapport building phase of child investigative interviewing is referred to in practice guidelines...
Two socioemotional factors were explored in association with children’s production of forensic infor...
Two socioemotional factors were explored in association with children’s production of forensic infor...
Objective: The aim of the research was to analyse interviewer practice in investigative interviews, ...
Young people suspected of being sexually exploited are unlikely to have made prior disclosures befor...
Rapport-building is key in child investigative interviews, however, recommendations of how to build ...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
In the United Kingdom alone, it is estimated that between 550,000 - 850,000 individuals pose varying...
Supportive forensic interviews conducted in accordance with the National Institute of Child Health a...
According to the Home Office Memorandum (1992), a rapport-building phase should always be included a...
Four studies examined the investigative interviewing of children. Their purpose was to consider the ...
Police interviews (n = 97) with 5- to 13-year-olds alleging multiple incidents of sexual abuse were ...
Police interviews (n=97) with 5- to 13-year-olds alleging multiple incidents of sexual abuse were ex...