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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
4 pages in length. As with any other situation where critical thinking and decision-making must occur simultaneously, allowing interns to perform forensic testing may cause more of a problem than it solves. This is not to say that interns should never be given the opportunity to partake in forensics testing, but rather that a very strict set of guidelines must be in place – along with qualified overseers – in order for preventable mistakes to be avoided. When the issue at hand is murder, however, interns should be like children at an adult function: seen but not heard. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCForensIn.rtf
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the field by virtue of its intrinsic connection to the criminal justice system, an alliance that provides for better understanding of "the vast psychological perspectives" (Diviny et al, 2000) inherent
to the law. More than that, however, is the fact that forensic psychology deals in myriad aspects of the legal component, not the least of which include helping to
set policy and create laws, determining offender competency, establishing a defendants mental condition at the time when the crime was committed, criminal profiling, attorney consultation for jury selection, treating mentally
unstable offenders, acting as expert witness in court and "analyzing a criminals mind and intent" (Diviny et al, 2000), all of which contribute to the determination of when a psychologist
should or can testify in court. Criminal profiling - which is defined as "the application of psychological theory to the analysis and reconstruction
of the forensic evidence that relates to an offenders crime scenes, victims and behaviors" (Clemens, 1998, p. 27) - reflects an individual who must possess myriad specially trained abilities in
order to carry out the requirements of this unique profession, such as being able to reconstruct the crime scene prior to profiling the offender in court. This component of
forensic psychology seeks to uncover how and why the crime took place, which ultimately leads to a better profile. Throughout the last century, forensic psychology has evolved to become
an inextricable component to the criminal justice system; that nearly two thousand psychologists were standing members of the American Psychology-Law Society as of the year 2000 (Diviny et al, 2000)
speaks to the ever-growing nature of this subcategory as the demand for more specialists in the courtroom only continues to increase. At the other end of the spectrum, however, is
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