Five Studies About: Interrogation
Curated crime research studies, all relating to interrogation
Hello! I'm Aaron Jacklin, and this is The Art of Explaining Crime, an independent newsletter that helps you think and write about crime.
Published Tuesdays and Thursdays, Five Studies About (formerly “Your First Five”) is a free tip sheet made up of a curated selection of recent crime and justice research that’s related to one topic.

These new crime studies related to interrogation were recently published by journals I monitor.
1. Repeated interrogations of sources of human intelligence using the Scharff technique [Journal of Policing, Intelligence and Counter Terrorism]
2. Defense attorney perspectives about juvenile interrogations: SROs, parents, and the adolescent defendant [Psychology, Crime & Law]
3. Interviewing and interrogation practices and beliefs, 20 years later: A national self-report survey of American police. [Law and Human Behavior]
4. Humane Interrogation Strategies Are Associated With Confessions, Cooperation, and Disclosure: Evidence From a Field Study of Incarcerated Individuals in the United States [Criminal Justice and Behavior]
5. Science‐based interviewing: Information elicitation [Journal of Investigative Psychology and Offender Profiling]
I might cover some of these studies further in The Practice of Understanding Crime. If one sounds interesting or important, let me know in the comments:
Five Things About and thedirectories I'm experimenting with are the output of my research discovery system.