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Kassin/Fein/Markus' SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 11th Edition, brings chapter
concepts to life through a unique emphasis on current events in
sports, music, entertainment, technology, social media, business,
world politics and more. Combining scholarship with real-world
illustrations, it helps you understand the field of social
psychology through engaging connections to everyday life.
Integrating both classic and emerging research, the text delivers
comprehensive coverage of social cognition and applications to law,
business, and health and well-being. In addition, author Hazel Rose
Markus, a respected researcher in the study of cultural psychology,
integrates culture and diversity topics into every chapter. Also
available, the MindTap digital learning solution powers you from
memorization to mastery with videos, interactive assignments,
note-taking tools, a text-to-speech app, a reader and much more.
When the prosecution introduces confession testimony during a
criminal trial, the effect is usually overwhelming. In fact,
jurors' verdicts are affected more by a confession than by
eyewitness testimony. While eyewitness studies are massive in
numbers, the topic of confession evidence has been largely ignored
by psychologists and other social scientists. Confessions in the
Courtroom seeks to rectify this discrepancy. This timely book
examines how the legal system has evolved in its treatment of
confessions over the last half century and discusses, at length,
the U.S. Supreme Court's decision regarding Arizona v. Fulminante
which caused a reassessment of the acceptability of confessions
generated under duress. The authors examine the causes of
confessions and the interrogation procedure used by the police.
They also evaluate the process for determining the admissability of
confession testimony and provide excellent research on jurors'
reactions to voluntary and coerced confessions. Social scientists,
attorneys, members of the criminal justice system, and students
will find Confessions in the Courtroom to be an objective and
readable treatment on this important topic. "In this short volume,
the authors seek "to describe and evaluate what we know about
confessions given to police and their impact at the subsequent
trial." It is a comprehensive review of the social psychological
literature and legal decisions surrounding confessions. One of the
primary strengths of the manuscript is the interplay between social
science and law fostered by the authors' clear understanding of the
boundaries between these disciplines and appreciation of the
substantive areas they share. . . . [The authors] have produced a
comprehensive and imminently readable legal and psychological
treatise on confessions, valuable for established scholars and for
students." --Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice
Why do people confess to crimes they did not commit? And, surely,
those cases must be rare? In fact, it happens all the time--in
police stations, workplaces, public schools, and the military.
Psychologist Saul Kassin, the world's leading expert on false
confessions, explains how interrogators trick innocent people into
confessing, and then how the criminal justice system deludes us
into believing these confessions. Duped reveals how innocent men,
women, and children, intensely stressed and befuddled by lawful
weapons of psychological interrogation, are induced into
confession, no matter how horrific the crime. By featuring riveting
case studies, highly original research, work by the Innocence
Project, and quotes from real-life exonerees, Kassin tells the
story of how false confessions happen, and how they corrupt
forensics, witnesses, and other evidence, force guilty pleas, and
follow defendants for their entire lives-- even after they are
exonerated by DNA. Starting in the 1980's, Dr. Kassin pioneered the
scientific study of interrogations and confessions. Since then, he
has been on the forefront of research and advocacy for those
wrongfully convicted by police-induced false confessions. Examining
famous cases like the Central Park jogger case and Amanda Knox
case, as well as stories of ordinary innocent people trapped into
confession, Dr. Kassin exposes just how widespread this problem is.
Concluding with actionable solutions and proposals for legislative
reform, Duped shows why the stigma of confession persists and how
we can reform the criminal justice system to make it stop.
This collection of first-person accounts from legendary social
psychologists tells the stories behind the science and offers
unique insight into the development of the field from the 1950s to
the present. One pillar, the grandson of a slave, was inspired by
Kenneth Clark. Yet when he entered his PhD program in the 1960s, he
was told that race was not a variable for study. Other pillars
faced first-hand a type of sexism that was hardly subtle, when
women were not permitted into the faculty dining room. Still others
have lived through a tremendous diversification of social
psychology, not only in the United States but in Europe and Asia,
that characterizes the field today. Together these stories, always
witty and sometimes emotional, form a mosaic of the field as a
whole - its legends, their theories and research, their
relationships with one another, and their sense of where social
psychology is headed.
This collection of first-person accounts from legendary social
psychologists tells the stories behind the science and offers
unique insight into the development of the field from the 1950s to
the present. One pillar, the grandson of a slave, was inspired by
Kenneth Clark. Yet when he entered his PhD program in the 1960s, he
was told that race was not a variable for study. Other pillars
faced first-hand a type of sexism that was hardly subtle, when
women were not permitted into the faculty dining room. Still others
have lived through a tremendous diversification of social
psychology, not only in the United States but in Europe and Asia,
that characterizes the field today. Together these stories, always
witty and sometimes emotional, form a mosaic of the field as a
whole - its legends, their theories and research, their
relationships with one another, and their sense of where social
psychology is headed.
When the prosecution introduces confession testimony during a
criminal trial, the effect is usually overwhelming. In fact,
jurors' verdicts are affected more by a confession than by
eyewitness testimony. While eyewitness studies are massive in
numbers, the topic of confession evidence has been largely ignored
by psychologists and other social scientists. Confessions in the
Courtroom seeks to rectify this discrepancy. This timely book
examines how the legal system has evolved in its treatment of
confessions over the last half century and discusses, at length,
the U.S. Supreme Court's decision regarding Arizona v. Fulminante
which caused a reassessment of the acceptability of confessions
generated under duress. The authors examine the causes of
confessions and the interrogation procedure used by the police.
They also evaluate the process for determining the admissability of
confession testimony and provide excellent research on jurors'
reactions to voluntary and coerced confessions. Social scientists,
attorneys, members of the criminal justice system, and students
will find Confessions in the Courtroom to be an objective and
readable treatment on this important topic. "In this short volume,
the authors seek "to describe and evaluate what we know about
confessions given to police and their impact at the subsequent
trial." It is a comprehensive review of the social psychological
literature and legal decisions surrounding confessions. One of the
primary strengths of the manuscript is the interplay between social
science and law fostered by the authors' clear understanding of the
boundaries between these disciplines and appreciation of the
substantive areas they share. . . . [The authors] have produced a
comprehensive and imminently readable legal and psychological
treatise on confessions, valuable for established scholars and for
students." --Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice
Distinguished by its current-events emphasis in such areas as
sports, music, entertainment, technology, business, and world
politics; and the aim to bring the outside world into the field of
social psychology through engaging connections to everyday life,
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, Tenth Edition, remains one of the most scholarly
and well-written texts in its field. Integrating classic and
contemporary research, the text also includes comprehensive
coverage of social cognition and evolutionary psychology, and
features authoritative material on social psychology and the law.
Coverage of culture and diversity is integrated into every chapter
by Hazel Rose Markus, a leader and respected researcher in the
study of cultural psychology. The book is available with MindTap, a
digital learning experience that guides you through the course by
combining readings, videos and multimedia, and interactive
assignments -- complemented by tools such as note taking and a
text-to-speech app.
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