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The Psychology of Testimony and the Interrogation of Children: Contesting the Expertise of Teachers and Female Police Officers, circa 1922-1944. [PDF]
Schlicht L.
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Artificial intelligence and real decisions: predictive systems and generative AI vs. emotive-cognitive legal deliberations. [PDF]
Contini F, Minissale A, Bergman Blix S.
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Digital Prosecutor’s Assistant or Digital Prosecutor?
Russian Journal of Legal Studies (Moscow), 2023The research examines some aspects of the digitalization of law enforcement. The author selectively analyzes relevant regulatory framework and a number of domestic and foreign examples of the use of artificial intelligence in the activities of law enforcement agencies and the prosecutor's office.
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Prosecutors and their Legislatures, Legislatures and their Prosecutors
2021Abstract This chapter explores the often-pathological relationship between prosecutors and legislatures and considers fiscal pressure as an important antidote to the pathology. Institutional incentives between prosecutors and legislatures align in a way quite different than the classic separation of powers story. Rather, legislatures are
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The sensitive prosecutor: Emotional experiences of prosecutors in managing criminal proceedings
International Journal of Law and Psychiatry, 2019For over three decades, therapeutic jurisprudence (TJ) has produced rich scholarship highlighting the inseparable connection between law and personal wellbeing. Only recently, however, have TJ scholars begun to explore the influence that the law has on those practicing it. The current research aims to contribute to this developing area of study.
Shira, Leiterdorf-Shkedy, Tali, Gal
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2019
Abstract The English constitutional system has traditionally avoided a centralized ministry of justice on the continental model. Responsibility for investigating crime, commencing prosecutions, and presenting the case at court has been shared amongst a large number of different agencies.
John Sprack, Michael Engelhardt–Sprack
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Abstract The English constitutional system has traditionally avoided a centralized ministry of justice on the continental model. Responsibility for investigating crime, commencing prosecutions, and presenting the case at court has been shared amongst a large number of different agencies.
John Sprack, Michael Engelhardt–Sprack
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New Criminal Law Review, 2021
The tailwinds might be behind criminal justice reform, but American mercy power remains locked in a sputtering clemency model. Centralized leadership should be braver or the centralized institutions should be streamlined, the arguments go—but what if the more basic mercy problem is centralization itself? In this essay, I explore that question.
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The tailwinds might be behind criminal justice reform, but American mercy power remains locked in a sputtering clemency model. Centralized leadership should be braver or the centralized institutions should be streamlined, the arguments go—but what if the more basic mercy problem is centralization itself? In this essay, I explore that question.
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