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Impact of propensity evidence on juror decisions

thesis
posted on 2006-01-01, 00:00 authored by Maxine Louise. Cleghorn
The thesis's study evaluated the effect that the admission of an accused's prior criminal behaviour had on mock jurors' verdict decisions. The findings indicated that exposing participants to evidence about any previous offence biases the decision. Further, the greater the similarity of the previous offence with the present charge, the more likely the accused was found guilty. The clinical portfolio seeks to demonstrate through the presentation of four case studies, the various pathways (or offence trajectories) contained within the Pathways Model that may lead an adult male to sexually offend against a child.

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Pagination

2 v. ; 30 cm.

Material type

thesis

Resource type

thesis

Language

eng

Notes

Thesis (D.Psychology (Forensic))--Deakin University, Victoria, 2006.

Degree name

D.Psychology (Forensic)

Faculty

Faculty of Health

School

School of Psychology

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