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Strategic Disclosure of Evidence: Perspectives from Psychology and Law

New Publication!

A new publication by Divya Sukumar, Jackie Hodgson & Kim Wade explores perspectives from psychology and law on police disclosure. The abstract can be read below and the article can be found here: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/304181533_Strategic_Disclosure_of_Evidence_Perspectives_From_Psychology_and_Law

The police frequently present their evidence to suspects in investigative interviews. Accordingly, psychologists have developed strategic ways in which the police may present evidence to catch suspects lying or to elicit more information from suspects. While research in psychology continues to illustrate the effectiveness of strategic evidence disclosure tactics in lie detection, lawyers and legal research challenge these very tactics as undermining fair trial defense rights. Legal research is alive to the problems associated with strategically disclosing evidence to a suspect, such as preventing lawyers from advising the suspect effectively, increasing custodial pressure for the suspect, and worsening working relations between lawyers and police. This paper brings together the opposing research and arguments from the two disciplines of psychology and law, and suggests a new way forward for future research and policy on how the police should disclose evidence.

 

Mon 27 Jun 2016, 22:26 | Tags: Empirical research, Law & Psychology, Publication

Jackie Hodgson & Laurène Soubise: Understanding the sentencing process in France

Jackie Hodgson and Laurène Soubise have a new forthcoming publication in 45 Crime and Justice (ed. Michael Tonry), Sentencing Policies and Practices in Western Countries:Comparative and Cross-National Perspectives, on 'Understanding the Sentencing Process in France'.

French sentencing is characterized by broad judicial discretion and an ethos of individualized justice that is adapted to the rehabilitation of the offender. The current approach aims to prevent recidivism through rehabilitation and so protect the interests of society as well as reintegrating the offender as reformed citizen. In opposition to this approach is that of the political right, characterized by the recent Sarkozy regime, which favors deterrence through harsher penalties, minimum prison sentences and increased incarceration, including after the sentence has been served in the case of offenders considered dangerous. This article looks at the practice as well as the theory of French sentencing and locates the sentencing process (for it is a process, not a single event) within the broader context of French inquisitorially rooted criminal procedure. It argues that the central part played by the prosecutor in criminal cases (including in case disposition through alternative sanctions), her role in recommending a sentence to the court and the court’s invariable decision to follow this suggestion, together with the unitary mature of the French judicial profession, means that despite the broad discretion afforded the sentencing judge, there is a remarkable degree of consistency in the penalties imposed. It examines the range of penalties available and considers the most recent addition put forward by the Consensus Commission and legislated in 2014, the contrainte pénale, suggesting that this is unlikely to have a great impact without the investment of resources in the probation service and a change in the judicial culture which still favors simple sentencing options, including imprisonment, to the array of alternative options now in place.

Thu 05 May 2016, 14:17 | Tags: Comparative research, Empirical research, Publication

Forthcoming publication: From the domestic to the European: An empirical approach to comparative custodial legal advice

Jackie Hodgson contributed to the Handbook on Comparative Criminal Procedure edited by Jacqueline E. Ross and Stephen C. Thaman and soon to be published by Edward Elgar Publishing.

This Handbook presents cutting-edge research that compares different criminal procedure systems by focusing on the mechanisms by which legal systems seek to avoid error, protect rights, ground their legitimacy, expand lay participation in the criminal process, and develop alternatives to criminal trials, such as plea bargaining, as well as alternatives to the criminal process as a whole, such as intelligence operations. The criminal procedures examined in this book include those of the United States, Germany, France, Spain, Russia, India, Latin America, Taiwan, and Japan, among others.

Jackie's own contribution is entitled 'From the Domestic to the European: An Empirical Approach to Comparative Custodial Legal Advice'.

Wed 20 Apr 2016, 07:22 | Tags: Comparative research, Empirical research, Publication

Forthcoming publication: Disclosure and Custodial Legal Advice

Divya Sukumar (PhD student, Psychology), Professor Jackie Hodgson (Law), and Dr Kim Wade (Psychology) have have a new forthcoming publication in the International Journal of Evidence and Proof. Their interdisciplinary empirical report 'How the timing of police evidence disclosure impacts custodial legal advice' draws upon data from 100 criminal lawyers in England and Wales. The paper highlights the importance of pre-interview evidence disclosure for lawyers advising suspects at the police station.
Access the full report here:
Fri 18 Mar 2016, 14:38 | Tags: Empirical research, Law & Psychology, Publication

Jackie Hodgson to train Greater Manchester Police officers

Next week, Jackie Hodgson - with the assistance of her PhD student, Divya Sukumar - will be training over 80 officers from Greater Manchester Police on safeguards for young suspects during police interrogation. This training session flows from Jackie's participation in a large-scale, EU-funded research project in collaboration with colleagues from four other jurisdictions.

More information on the research project is available on the Criminal Justice Centre website.

Sat 27 Feb 2016, 12:26 | Tags: Comparative research, Empirical research, Public engagement

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