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Academic Journals
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From:Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders (Vol. 50, Issue 10) Peer-ReviewedThis study investigated whether a brief parent-mediated intervention would increase the frequency of question asking in children with ASD. Mothers participated in a 3-week training consisting of 2-h sessions twice...
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From:Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (Vol. 99, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedI. INTRODUCTION In an Article published in this Journal in 2005, we advocated the enactment of state statutes requiring that interviews of suspects held in custody at police facilities be electronically recorded, and...
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From:Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (Vol. 86, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe Miranda decision continues to receive much criticism almost three decades after it was handed down and the Supreme Court's confession decisions since then have chipped away at it. Police educators, newspaper...
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From:Trial (Vol. 36, Issue 10)In Dickerson v. United States(1), as I(2) and other legal commentators predicted, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld Miranda v. Arizona.(3) Less expected was the impressive 7-2 vote. In particular, many Court watchers may...
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From:World Affairs (Vol. 179, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIn May 2007, I concluded my remarks to the graduates of Duquesne University (my Alma Mater) with these words: "Life will soon bring you increased responsibilities, and it is rare that you will have a legitimate choice...
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From:Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (Vol. 105, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIn the recent Supreme Court case Salinas v. Texas, the Court declined to answer whether precustodial silence should be admissible as evidence of a defendant's guilt. This Comment uses the case as an example from which...
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From:The FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin (Vol. 77, Issue 1)The first homicide in recorded history is revealing not only because it is the first known act of violence by one human being against another but because the narrative description of the incident (1) lends itself to an...
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From:Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (Vol. 109, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedPolice interrogators across the United States employ tactics that can lead to coerced, often false, confessions. While police departments have shifted away from physically coercive methods of interrogation,...
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From:The FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin (Vol. 81, Issue 8)Throughout their careers, law enforcement officers must face the challenge of determining when someone is lying or hiding information.' As researchers have demonstrated, this task can prove difficult. Most people have...
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From:Michigan Law Review (Vol. 99, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedI. INTRODUCTION: FOCUSING ON VOLUNTARINESS TO LIMIT THE USE OF DECEPTION Virtually all interrogations -- or at least virtually all successful interrogations -- involve some deception.(1) As the United States Supreme...
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From:TrialIn Florida v. Powell (1) and Maryland v. Shatzer, (2) the U.S. Supreme Court decided two technical issues about the Miranda warnings that are worthy of discussion. In Powell, police officers arrested Kevin Powell on...
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From:Michigan Law Review (Vol. 102, Issue 8) Peer-ReviewedYale Kamisar, about which I have said too much elsewhere in this issue of the Review, (1) could rightly be called "Mr. Confessions," for he has not only authored books and a host of articles on the subject of police...
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From:T+D (Vol. 56, Issue 12) Peer-ReviewedQuestioning is the heart and soul of training--the most widely used instructional strategy to facilitate learning. Questioning is the essence of effective teaching because of the numerous purposes it serves, such as...
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From:Internal Auditor (Vol. 59, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedConfession may be good for the soul, but try selling that to a liar facing hefty financial penalties or even jail time for such a cleansing. In many organizations, the responsibility for detecting lies and obtaining...
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From:The Oral History Review (Vol. 29, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIf my family stories can be counted as oral history, then my introduction to this means of extracting personal memories came at a very early age. When I was in my early teenage years, my grandmother started telling me...
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From:The FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin (Vol. 67, Issue 10)Interrogators can take a number of steps to improve their chances of conducting successful interrogations. These include preparing for the interrogation by selecting the right setting and learning about the background of...
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From:Social Work (Vol. 44, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedQuestions asked by social workers are affected by professional standards, setting, interpersonal relationship and values, among other factors. With regards to interpersonal relationship, questions to be asked by social...
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From:Management Decision (Vol. 33, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedManagers often ask questions that do not receive full and accurate answers because employees consider these to be sensitive or threatening. Some examples of threatening questions are those asked in fraud investigations...
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From:PS: Political Science & Politics (Vol. 29, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe implementation of a modified Socratic method of classroom instruction is a good way of making learning less of a drudgery and more of a day-to-day challenge and serves to arouse the interest of students in general....
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From:Science and Children (Vol. 51, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedObjective: For students to pose a scientific question and plan an investigation to answer that question Grade level: 3-5 Engage To engage the students and assess their prior knowledge, I asked them to think...