Emotions and Culpability: How the Law Is at Odds with Psychology, Jurors, and Itself by Norman J. Finkel, Hardcover, 9781591474166 | Buy online at The Nile
Departments
 Free Returns*

Emotions and Culpability: How the Law Is at Odds with Psychology, Jurors, and Itself

How The Law Is At Odds With Psychology, Jurors, And Itself

Author: Norman J. Finkel and W. Gerrod Parrott   Series: Law and Public Policy: Psychology and the Social Sciences

Investigates why, when, and how ordinary human beings hold some individuals guilty of crimes, but others less so or not at all. The authors argue persuasively that US law is out of touch with the way that jurors' “commonsense justice” works and the way they judge culpability.

Read more
Product Unavailable

PRODUCT INFORMATION

Summary

Investigates why, when, and how ordinary human beings hold some individuals guilty of crimes, but others less so or not at all. The authors argue persuasively that US law is out of touch with the way that jurors' “commonsense justice” works and the way they judge culpability.

Read more

Description

This book investigates why, when, and how ordinary human beings hold some individuals guilty of crimes, but others less so or not at all. Why, for example, do the emotions of the accused sometimes aggravate a murder, making it a heinous crime, whereas other emotions might mitigate that murder to manslaughter, excuse a killing ("by reason of insanity"), or even justify it ("by reason of self-defense")? And what emotions on the part of jurors come into play as they arrive at their decisions?

The authors argue persuasively that U.S. law is out of touch with the way that jurors' "commonsense justice" works and the way they judge culpability. This disconnect has resulted in some inconsistent verdicts across different types of cases and thus has serious implications for whether the law will be respected and obeyed.

Problems arise because criminal law has no unified theory of emotion and culpability, and legal scholars often seem to misunderstand or ignore what psychologists know about emotion. The authors skillfully show that the law's culpability theories are (and must be) psychological at heart, and they propose ways in which psychology can help inform and support the law.

Read more

More on this Book

This book investigates why, when, and how ordinary human beings hold some individuals guilty of crimes, but others less so or not at all. Why, for example, do the emotions of the accused sometimes aggravate a murder, making it a heinous crime, whereas other emotions might mitigate that murder to manslaughter, excuse a killing ("by reason of insanity"), or even justify it ("by reason of self-defense")? And what emotions on the part of jurors come into play as they arrive at their decisions? The authors argue persuasively that U.S. law is out of touch with the way that jurors' "commonsense justice" works and the way they judge culpability. This disconnect has resulted in some inconsistent verdicts across different types of cases and thus has serious implications for whether the law will be respected and obeyed. Problems arise because criminal law has no unified theory of emotion and culpability, and legal scholars often seem to misunderstand or ignore what psychologists know about emotion. The authors skillfully show that the law's culpability theories are (and must be) psychological at heart, and they propose ways in which psychology can help inform and support the law.

Read more

Product Details

Publisher
American Psychological Association (APA) | American Psychological Association
Published
30th June 2006
Edition
1st
Pages
312
ISBN
9781591474166

Returns

This item is eligible for free returns within 30 days of delivery. See our returns policy for further details.

Product Unavailable