Zobrazeno 1 - 8
of 8
pro vyhledávání: '"Tyler J. Vaughan"'
Autor:
Tyler J. Vaughan, Lisa Bell Holleran
Publikováno v:
Justice Quarterly. 40:187-210
Autor:
Lisa Bell Holleran, Tyler J. Vaughan
Publikováno v:
Behavioral Sciences & the Law. 38:317-336
The US Supreme Court has required that death penalty schemes narrow the class of persons eligible for a death sentence. Through the selection requirement, juries must use mitigating and aggravating evidence jointly to select the offenders engaged in
Publikováno v:
Justice Quarterly. 36:1176-1205
This study applies moral foundations theory to capital juror decision making. We hypothesized that binding moral foundations would predict death qualification and punitive sentencing decisions, whe...
Publikováno v:
Journal of interpersonal violence. 37(7-8)
This study examined the effect of an offender’s sex (male/female) on whether sexual-offense incidents reported to law enforcement culminated in an arrest. Two hypotheses, chivalry and evil woman, are relied upon and suggest that the probability of
Publikováno v:
Behavioral Sciences & the Law. 34:742-766
Previous studies have found aggravating, mitigating, and null effects of defendant histories of abuse and neglect on punishment preferences in capital sentencing. Perceiving these defendants as more dangerous, jurors may be more likely to favor the d
Publikováno v:
Criminal Justice Policy Review. 30:79-101
Recently, the number of veteran treatment courts (VTCs) has greatly expanded. These courts, based on drug treatment court processes, attempt to handle the underlying causes of criminal conduct as well as the instant offense. There is, however, no res
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Criminal Justice. 42:112-133
Since the redefinition of self-control (Hirschi, 2004) social bonding measures have been utilized as predictors or indicators of revised or decisional self-control. This approach departs from the prior literature which has hypothesized a selection ef
Publikováno v:
Behavioral sciencesthe law. 34(6)
Previous studies have found aggravating, mitigating, and null effects of defendant histories of abuse and neglect on punishment preferences in capital sentencing. Perceiving these defendants as more dangerous, jurors may be more likely to favor the d