Psychology, public policy, and law
- Washington, DC : American Psychological Association, 2021-
- volumes 28 cm.
- Quarterly
- Volume 27, number 1 (February 2021- )
Forensic E-Mental Health: Review, Research priorities, and policy directions Lauren R. Kois, et al. Tele-forensic interviewing to elicit children's evidence-benefits, risks, and practical considerations Dierdre Brown, et al. Making the case for videoconferencing and remote child custody evaluations (RCCES): The emperical, ethical, and evidentiar arguments for accepting new technology Milfred D. Dale and Desiree Smith Intimate partner violence (IPV) and family dispute resolution: A Randomized controlled trial comparing shuttle mediation, videoconferencing mediation, and litigation Amy Holtzworth-Munroe, et al. Children who offend: Why are prevention and intervention efforts to reduce persistent criminality so seldom applied? Jerome Reil, et al. Do structured risk assessments predict violent, any, and sexual offending better than structured judgement? An Umbrella Review Jodi L. Viljoen, et al. Evaluating selection for sexually violent predator (SVP) commitment: A comparison of those committed, not committed, and nearly committed Anthony D. Perillo, et al. What are judges' views of risk assessments, and how do tools affect adolescent dispositions? Melissa R. Johnson and Jodi L. Viljoen Flattening the curve in jails and prisons: Factors underlying support for COVID-19 mitigation policies Jennifer Eno Louden, et al. Testing two retrieval stratefies to enhance eyewitness memory: category and location clustering recall Rui M. Paulo, et al.
1076-8971 (print) 1939-1528 (online)
= Psychology, public policy, and law
= Psychol. public policy law
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