During the last 30 years, the way in which children give evidence in the criminal justice system in England and Wales has been radically transformed. These reforms have, however, neglected child suspects in the police station. Recent piecemeal reforms to the statutory regime for children in police detention have overlooked a critical stage of the criminal justice process: the police interview. This article critically analyses the policy, practice and law surrounding police questioning of child suspects. It demonstrates that the absence of child-specific guidance when interviewing child suspects is not only out of step with wider reforms, but carries real risks regarding the effective communication and participation of child suspects
During investigative interviews, police practice can influence key aspects of child credibility, nam...
Abstract: As a result of an increasing awareness of child sexual abuse over the last few decades, c...
Purpose: This two‐phase study employed a mixed‐methods design to explore UK police officers' percept...
During the last 30 years, the way in which children give evidence in the criminal justice system in ...
This is the Executive Summary of the final report arising out of a study funded by the Nuffield Foun...
Anonymised schedules of data collected as part of a doctoral study into the experiences of children ...
The Nuffield Foundation funded this three year project which involved examining the efficacy of lega...
While studies have explored adult suspects’ understanding of their legal rights, seldom are the expe...
Informed by data extracted from 30,921 police electronic custody records, drawn from 44 police stati...
In the year to March 2018 there were 65,833 arrests of children and young people (YJB/MOJ 2019). The...
In many jurisdictions, police officers are responsible for deciding whether cases of child abuse are...
This article analyses how police officers conducting interviews with children reporting their being ...
This article presents findings from research undertaken by the Authors with police officers in the U...
This thesis is a socio-legal study of police and prosecutorial decision-making in the context of spe...
There are specific guidelines for forensic interviews with children [for example, Crown Prosecution ...
During investigative interviews, police practice can influence key aspects of child credibility, nam...
Abstract: As a result of an increasing awareness of child sexual abuse over the last few decades, c...
Purpose: This two‐phase study employed a mixed‐methods design to explore UK police officers' percept...
During the last 30 years, the way in which children give evidence in the criminal justice system in ...
This is the Executive Summary of the final report arising out of a study funded by the Nuffield Foun...
Anonymised schedules of data collected as part of a doctoral study into the experiences of children ...
The Nuffield Foundation funded this three year project which involved examining the efficacy of lega...
While studies have explored adult suspects’ understanding of their legal rights, seldom are the expe...
Informed by data extracted from 30,921 police electronic custody records, drawn from 44 police stati...
In the year to March 2018 there were 65,833 arrests of children and young people (YJB/MOJ 2019). The...
In many jurisdictions, police officers are responsible for deciding whether cases of child abuse are...
This article analyses how police officers conducting interviews with children reporting their being ...
This article presents findings from research undertaken by the Authors with police officers in the U...
This thesis is a socio-legal study of police and prosecutorial decision-making in the context of spe...
There are specific guidelines for forensic interviews with children [for example, Crown Prosecution ...
During investigative interviews, police practice can influence key aspects of child credibility, nam...
Abstract: As a result of an increasing awareness of child sexual abuse over the last few decades, c...
Purpose: This two‐phase study employed a mixed‐methods design to explore UK police officers' percept...