Postmodernism affects and further explains the use of interrogation methods in American military court-martial investigations. Postmodernism is a term used by sociologists to define the era after modernity and structuralism (around 1960s onward to present). Sociologist and postmodernist, Jean Baudrillard, in his book America, described American society as a collection of rootless, circulatory fictions that have no ultimate meaning. Postmodernists are skeptical about meaning, and they see the present social world as a simulacrum of reality. Sociologist Richard Rorty believed that postmodernism was full of irony, where someone could use wording alone to spin just about anything into a good or bad light. Because of this, no one thing is true o...
Substantial research has assessed interrogations seeking to obtain a criminal confession, and conseq...
The term “torture” typically evokes images of physically brutal violence. Coercive interrogation tec...
This article reviews Richard A. Leo’s book \u27Police Interrogation and American Justice.\u27 Prior ...
This book is a comprehensive empirical study of police interrogation in America. The author examines...
This article continues a series describing research presentations from the 1998 Annual Convention of...
This research explores how investigative techniques of interrogation destroy a subject’s sense of se...
Recorded interrogations are one of the chief procedural reforms fueled by the innocence movement. Po...
False confessions are a major cause of wrongful convictions. In many countries, physical abuse and t...
Nearly all confessions obtained by interrogators nationwide are inadmissible, but nonetheless admitt...
Nearly all confessions obtained by interrogators nationwide are inadmissible, but nonetheless admitt...
The way we think about crime and the way that society responds to it are imbued with values that can...
The Reid Interrogation technique has been the dominant method used by police in the United States an...
This paper examines the methodology of interrogation in the United States, specifically the usage of...
Interrogation practices in the United States have been roundly criticized both for their accusatoria...
Police interrogators across the United States employ tactics that can lead to coerced, often false, ...
Substantial research has assessed interrogations seeking to obtain a criminal confession, and conseq...
The term “torture” typically evokes images of physically brutal violence. Coercive interrogation tec...
This article reviews Richard A. Leo’s book \u27Police Interrogation and American Justice.\u27 Prior ...
This book is a comprehensive empirical study of police interrogation in America. The author examines...
This article continues a series describing research presentations from the 1998 Annual Convention of...
This research explores how investigative techniques of interrogation destroy a subject’s sense of se...
Recorded interrogations are one of the chief procedural reforms fueled by the innocence movement. Po...
False confessions are a major cause of wrongful convictions. In many countries, physical abuse and t...
Nearly all confessions obtained by interrogators nationwide are inadmissible, but nonetheless admitt...
Nearly all confessions obtained by interrogators nationwide are inadmissible, but nonetheless admitt...
The way we think about crime and the way that society responds to it are imbued with values that can...
The Reid Interrogation technique has been the dominant method used by police in the United States an...
This paper examines the methodology of interrogation in the United States, specifically the usage of...
Interrogation practices in the United States have been roundly criticized both for their accusatoria...
Police interrogators across the United States employ tactics that can lead to coerced, often false, ...
Substantial research has assessed interrogations seeking to obtain a criminal confession, and conseq...
The term “torture” typically evokes images of physically brutal violence. Coercive interrogation tec...
This article reviews Richard A. Leo’s book \u27Police Interrogation and American Justice.\u27 Prior ...