UCI to host forum on psychology and law
Susan Menning
Hit television dramas like “CSI” and “Law & Order” are popularizing
criminology, but researchers at UCI are having real-world impact on
the way police, lawyers and courts are achieving justice.
“It’s important that our criminal justice system is both accurate
and just, and our faculty are conducting scientific research that
helps improve the accuracy of the system, ensuring that we convict
the guilty and not the innocent,” said Professor C. Ronald Huff, dean
of social ecology. “Our research also is providing useful scientific
information about how children and adolescents should be viewed as
witnesses, victims and offenders in the justice system.”
Recent U.S. News & World Report graduate school rankings recognize
the UCI School of Social Ecology’s rising profile in psychology and
law -- listing the criminology program as fourth in the nation, with
psychology and social behavior among the top 50.
Social ecology faculty at UCI include nationally and
internationally recognized experts in the use of forensic evidence in
court, false confessions, eyewitness testimony and the special issues
posed by children in the legal system. They have testified and
advised on a wide range of high-profile cases including the McMartin
preschool molestation trial, the rise in Catholic Church child abuse,
the Menendez brothers’ and O.J. Simpson murder trials, the Elizabeth
Smart kidnapping case and the Supreme Court ruling on death sentences
for juveniles.
Recently, a new Center for the Study of Psychology and Law was
created at UCI, to be directed by professor Elizabeth Loftus, who is
renowned for her research on false memories. Loftus and other center
faculty will present a panel discussion with audience Q&A; next month
to examine emerging issues in psychology and law.
On May 17, “Beyond CSI: Psychology, Crime and Justice” will be
moderated by William Thompson, professor of criminology and society
-- an expert on the use of DNA evidence, who recently helped expose
the mishandling of DNA evidence in a Houston crime lab. This problem
led to the overturning of two convictions and disciplinary action for
nine employees, which Thompson said, “is just the tip of a Texan
iceberg.”
Also on the panel is fellow forensics expert, Simon Cole, who has
been following the use and misuse of fingerprint evidence in court --
pointing to problematic cases like the FBI’s recent use of faulty
fingerprint evidence to erroneously link a Seattle man to the 2004
Madrid train terrorist bombings.
Associate professor Richard Leo, who is currently consulting a
number of law enforcement agencies that want to ensure their
interrogation practices don’t sabotage justice, will discuss his
research on false confessions. And psychologist Loftus will explain
how sincere eyewitness testimony can be contaminated due to the
malleable nature of human memory.
Other panelists will examine the special issues presented by
children in court -- as victims, witnesses and offenders. Alison
Clarke-Stewart, professor of psychology and social behavior, studies
the effects of biased interrogations and leading questions on the
accuracy of children’s reports. She and colleague Jodi Quas
frequently provide testimony and advise on issues of suggestibility
and interviewing techniques for youngsters. But when children are on
the wrong side of the law, psychologist Elizabeth Cauffman provides
insight.
She currently tracks the mental health of juveniles detained by
the California Youth Authority, collaborating with assistant
professor Jennifer Skeem, who researches psychopathic personality
disorder and studies outcomes among probationers who are required to
accept psychiatric treatment.
The event takes place at 5:30 p.m. May 17 at the Arnold and Mabel
Beckman Center, 100 Academy Drive, on the UCI campus.
The event is free and community members are encouraged to attend.
Reservations are required by May 3; e-mail rsvp-seuci.edu or fax
(949) 824-1845. Please include your full name and phone number. The
event is sponsored by the UCI School of Social Ecology and the Los
Angeles Times. For more information, call (949) 824-1874.
DISCOVER MORE ABOUT
THE PHYSICAL SCIENCES
Edwin Hubble realized that the universe is expanding, but only
recently have astrophysicists come to believe they have learned its
ultimate fate -- which is considered to be governed primarily by
“dark matter” and “dark energy.”
Learn about “The Dark Side of the Universe” on May 10, when UCI’s
David Buote discusses recent progress in establishing the existence
of these mysterious dark quantities and outlines future prospects for
uncovering the nature of this dark side.
The presentation -- free and open to the public -- takes place
from 7:30 to 9 a.m. at the Beckman Center. Breakfast will be served
and parking is free. For reservations, call (949) 824-4613.
HOLOCAUST ON TRIAL
Richard J. Evans, professor of modern history at Cambridge
University, will present “The Holocaust on Trial: Reflections on
History, Memory and Truth” at 3 p.m. April 20 in Humanities
Instructional Bldg. 135. Evans is the author of several books,
including “The Coming of the Third Reich” (2003), nominated for the
Los Angeles Times nonfiction book award in 2005.
The talk is free and open to the public. For more information,
call (949) 824-6521.
* SUSAN MENNING is assistant vice chancellor of communications at
UC Irvine. She can be reached at uciconnectuci.edu.
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