Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the quality of evidence collected during interview. Current UK national guidance on the interviewing of victims and witnesses recommends a phased approach, allowing the interviewee to deliver their free report before any questioning takes place, and stipulating that during this free report the interviewee should not be interrupted. Interviewers, therefore, often find it necessary during questioning to reactivate parts of the interviewee's free report for further elaboration. Design/methodology/approach – The first section of this paper draws on a collection of police interviews with women reporting rape, and discusses one method by which this is achieved – the indirect quotation of the ...
This is a study of police interviewing using an integrated approach, drawing on CA, CDA and pragmati...
The psycho-legal literature is scarce with respect to specific interviewing tactics aimed at eliciti...
One routine “common sense” means of explaining sexual violence is the ideologically facilitated tend...
This chapter provides an introduction to police-suspect interview discourse, focusing on its role as...
This study analyses the current role of police-suspect interview discourse in the England & Wales cr...
This study investigates the discursive patterns of interactions between police interviewers and wome...
This article presents an analysis of the discursive construction of evidence in an English police in...
This study investigates the discursive patterns of interactions between police interviewers and wome...
This article analyses how police officers conducting interviews with children reporting their being ...
Police-suspect interviews in England & Wales are a multi-audience, multi-purpose, transcontextual mo...
This article addresses a serious, but currently unacknowledged, problem of evidential consistency re...
This study examines how different evidence disclosure modes affect the elicitation of new critical i...
The interviewing of suspects is an important element in the investigation of crime.\ud However, stud...
Contrary to interviewing guidelines, a considerable portion of witness interviews are not recorded. ...
This is a study of police interviewing using an integrated approach, drawing on CA, CDA and pragmati...
The psycho-legal literature is scarce with respect to specific interviewing tactics aimed at eliciti...
One routine “common sense” means of explaining sexual violence is the ideologically facilitated tend...
This chapter provides an introduction to police-suspect interview discourse, focusing on its role as...
This study analyses the current role of police-suspect interview discourse in the England & Wales cr...
This study investigates the discursive patterns of interactions between police interviewers and wome...
This article presents an analysis of the discursive construction of evidence in an English police in...
This study investigates the discursive patterns of interactions between police interviewers and wome...
This article analyses how police officers conducting interviews with children reporting their being ...
Police-suspect interviews in England & Wales are a multi-audience, multi-purpose, transcontextual mo...
This article addresses a serious, but currently unacknowledged, problem of evidential consistency re...
This study examines how different evidence disclosure modes affect the elicitation of new critical i...
The interviewing of suspects is an important element in the investigation of crime.\ud However, stud...
Contrary to interviewing guidelines, a considerable portion of witness interviews are not recorded. ...
This is a study of police interviewing using an integrated approach, drawing on CA, CDA and pragmati...
The psycho-legal literature is scarce with respect to specific interviewing tactics aimed at eliciti...
One routine “common sense” means of explaining sexual violence is the ideologically facilitated tend...