In Praise of Forgetting: Historical Memory and Its Ironies. By David Rieff (Yale University Press, 2016, $25.00/Yale University Press, £14.99, 160pp.)
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Narrative Criminology: Understanding Stories of Crime. Edited by L. Presser and S. Sandberg (New York: New York University Press, 2015, 318 pp. £29.99 UK)
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Imaging victims, offenders and communities. An investigation into the representations of the crime stakeholders within restorative justice and their cultural context
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Interviewers’ approaches to questioning vulnerable child witnesses: The influences of developmental level versus intellectual disability status
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The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act: Unbridled Enforcement and Flawed Culpability Standards Deter SMEs from Entering the Global Marketplace
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Parental Kidnapping, Criminal Contempt of Court, and the Double Jeopardy Clause: A Recommendation for State Courts
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Missing White Woman Syndrome: An Empirical Analysis of Race and Gender Disparities in Online News Coverage of Missing Persons
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Cinderella Story? The Social Production of a Forensic “Science”
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“Half Cocked”: The Persistence of Anachronism and Presentism in the Academic Debate Over the Second Amendment
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Adapting measures of social climate for use with individuals with intellectual developmental disability in forensic settings
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ROLE OF THE STREET NETWORK IN BURGLARS' SPATIAL DECISION-MAKING*
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Evaluating interviews which search for the truth with suspects: but are investigators’ self-assessments of their own skills truthful ones?
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