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Escaname, Rogelio; Flores, Luis; Flores, Sylvia; Fuentes, Jorge; Martinez, Alan Herrera; Garcia, Iraselia; Mora, Vanessa – International Society for Technology, Education, and Science, 2020
The following research will assist in better understanding if gender, major, and technology use influences success rates among the Latino-ethnic undergraduate students in a Hispanic Serving Institution. The site chosen to be studied was located in a southern region of Texas and in a highly impoverished area. A previously administered instrument…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, College Students, Colleges, Undergraduate Students
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Costanzo, Mark A. – Teaching of Psychology, 2013
Teachers can incorporate topics in forensic psychology into lower level courses to increase student interest and to show how psychological processes influence outcomes in high-stakes applied contexts. One such topic is eyewitness identification, which teachers can use to show how stress affects memory and how memories can become distorted during…
Descriptors: Criminals, Justice, Criminal Law, Law Enforcement
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Tachino, Tosh – Written Communication, 2012
Recent scholarship in genre studies has extended its focus from studying single genres to multiple genres, as well as how these genres interact with one another. This essay seeks to contribute to this growing scholarship by adding a new concept, "intermediary genre". That is, a genre that facilitates the "uptake" of a genre by…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Literary Genres, Scholarship, Scientific Research
Borrego, Jesus – ProQuest LLC, 2010
Legal scholars have established that the U.S. Department of Justice's 2004 Federal Rules of Evidence (FRE) has created confusion in legal rulings on criminal cases involving digital evidence, resulting in conflicting verdicts. With the 2006 FRE update, the Department of Justice attempted to correct the problem. The conceptual framework for this…
Descriptors: Criminals, Social Change, Comparative Analysis, Models
Reinhardt, William R. – ProQuest LLC, 2010
Contrary to the dominant discourse metanarrative, this dissertation explores, re-exposes, and updates the generally hidden realities of what is actually taking place in the current operation of the American criminal justice system. The government/dominant discourse benefits from the amorphous ambiguity of the law in conjunction with its usage of…
Descriptors: Criminals, Justice, Criminal Law, Law Enforcement
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Egan, Nancy – Behavioral & Social Sciences Librarian, 2007
The Lloyd Sealy Library of John Jay College of Criminal Justice started as a small collection of books in the corner of the New York City Police Academy. A little over four decades later, it now contains one of the best collections of criminal justice materials in the world. Despite fiscal setbacks and tough times for the University and the…
Descriptors: Special Libraries, Criminals, Justice, Criminal Law
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Hepburn, John R.; Harvey, Angela N. – Crime & Delinquency, 2007
Drug courts routinely rely on the threat of legal sanction to motivate drug-using criminal offenders to enter and complete community-based treatment programs. In light of the high failure rates among drug court participants, what is the effect of the threat of legal sanction on program retention and completion? A quasiexperimental research design…
Descriptors: Sanctions, Criminals, Substance Abuse, Quasiexperimental Design
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Heilbrun, Alfred B., Jr.; Heilbrun, Mark R. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 1986
Examines the possible impact of the feminist movement upon criminal justice decisions relating to women. One body of data confirmed a trend away from indiscriminate leniency in the punishment of female criminals during the women's movement. The second set of data disclosed that an increased seriousness was accorded to the crime of rape as feminism…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Crime, Criminal Law, Criminals
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Bering, Jesse M.; Shackelford, Todd K. – American Psychologist, 2005
This paper presents comments on Kassin's review, (see record 2005-03019-002) of the psychology of false confessions. The authors note that Kassin's review makes a compelling argument for the need for legal reform in police interrogation practices. Because his work strikes at the heart of the American criminal justice system--its fairness--the…
Descriptors: Information Management, Psychology, Heuristics, Law Enforcement
Chaffin, Mark – Child Abuse and Neglect: The International Journal, 1992
Thirty-six father-daughter/stepdaughter sexual abusers were followed over the course of a two-year outpatient treatment program. Results supported the importance of pretreatment personality assessment and suggested that involvement of the criminal justice system does not interfere with, and may help, therapeutic progress. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Criminal Law, Criminals, Fathers
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Lucas, Jeffrey W.; Graif, Corina; Lovaglia, Michael J. – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2006
Prosecutorial misconduct involves the intentional use of illegal or improper methods for attaining convictions against defendants in criminal trials. Previous research documented extensive errors in the prosecution of severe crimes. A theory formulated to explain this phenomenon proposes that in serious cases, increased pressure to convict…
Descriptors: Criminals, Justice, Criminal Law, Law Enforcement
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Simon, Leonore M. – Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 1996
Investigates whether the victim-offender relationship plays a role in determining the original charge, crime conviction, and sentence length of inmates in prison for violent crimes. Results indicate the victim-offender relationship is related to the legal processing in paradoxical ways. Thus, although nonstranger offenders are charged with and…
Descriptors: Adults, Court Litigation, Crime, Criminal Law
Perissinotto, Giorgio – 1981
Two case studies involving possible violations of the rights of Spanish speaking criminal suspects are presented. In cases where suspects do not understand English, the Miranda warnings regarding the right to remain silent must be delivered in their native language and in a way that is understandable to the suspects. In the two cases involving…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Communication Problems, Communication (Thought Transfer), Comprehension
DiMascio, William M. – 1995
Five million people in the United States are under the supervision of the criminal justice system, 1.5 million in prisons or jails, the rest on probation or parole, and the inmate population continues to grow. Taxpayers spend billions of dollars each year on prisons and jails, yet the solution to crime problems remains elusive. To assist in…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Correctional Institutions, Correctional Rehabilitation, Crime
Wilson, James Q. – 1983
The great waves of foreign immigration, the onset of rapid industrialization, the emergence of an urban working class--all features of the post Civil War United States that might have contributed to rising crime rates--did not. Ted Robert Gurr suggests that a growth of the "civilizing process" occurred in which people turned away from violence and…
Descriptors: Crime, Crime Prevention, Criminal Law, Criminals
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