Psychology and Policing

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assessment
Assessment Centers
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center
commitment
Consecutive Night Shifts
Control Question Technique
Control Question Test
department
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eyewitness memory
Face Reconstruction
Federal Law Enforcement Training Center
flinders
group decision processes
Group Performance
Guilty Knowledge Test
interview techniques
Job Characteristic Variables
Job Function
Job Satisfaction
Law Enforcement Samples
leadership assessment
Modifying Driver Behavior
officer
organization
organizational
organizational behavior
Organizational Commitment
Overt Integrity Tests
Patrol Officers
Pay For Performance
Performance Appraisal
police
Police Citizen Interaction
Police Forces
Police Officer Attitudes
Preexperimental Designs
psychological research in law enforcement
road safety psychology
Shift System
Standard Police Interview
Subordinate Behavior
university

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805814187
  • Weight: 929g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 May 1995
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Psychological theory and research have much to contribute to the knowledge and skill bases underlying effective policing. Much of the relevant information, however, is dispersed across a variety of different psychological and criminal justice/policing journals and seldom integrated for those applied psychologists interested in policing issues or for police policymakers/administrators and others working in the criminal justice area who are not familiar with the psychological literature.

Designed to accommodate the needs of these different groups, this book addresses both operational policing issues and issues relevant to the improvement of organizational functioning by providing integrative reviews of psychological theory and research that deal with effective policing. It illustrates how the theory and research reviewed are relevant to specific policing practices. These include eyewitness testimony, conflict resolution, changing driver behavior, controlling criminal behavior, effective interviewing, and techniques of face reconstruction. The volume's readable style makes it accessible to a diverse audience including undergraduate and postgraduate students in forensic/organizational/applied psychology, criminal justice, and police science programs, and police administrators and policymakers. It will also interest psychologists whose primary focus includes policing and criminal justice issues. The book should draw attention to the often unrecognized and valuable contribution that mainstream psychology can make to the knowledge base underpinning a wide variety of policing practices.