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LAWS2260 Law and Psychology

Later Year Course

Offered By Law
Academic Career Undergraduate
Course Subject Laws
Offered in Second Semester, 2010 and Second Semester, 2011
Unit Value 6 units
Course Description

This course explores the interface of psychology and criminal law. One focus is psychology and courts, specifically the issues of eyewitnesses, psychologists as experts, witnesses, mental illness and the law, judicial decision making, children in court, persuasion and advocacy, language used in the courtroom, and jury research. Another focus is on the psychological study of legal processes outside courts, including policing, interviewing, detecting deception, restorative justice, and therapeutic jurisprudence.  Material discussed is primarily of relevance to the Australian legal system.  The course offers a critical perspective on the developing discipline of legal psychology.  Students are also shown how to research the interdisciplinary literature via relevant databases.

Learning Outcomes
  • Obtain an introduction to the field of legal psychology
  • Building confidence in researching, reading and critically analysing legal psychological literature including an empirical legal psychological report
  • Develop students' ability to read cases, legislation, and legal commentary in order to identify the psychological assumptions underlying and the psychological impact of legal reasoning, legal procedures, and the legal regulation of human behaviour including mental illness.
Indicative Assessment

A mid-semester research casenote or empirical report review, a short answer test, and a research essay.

Workload

There will be 3 hours of class time per week.  A further 7 or so hours of private study is expected per week in order to review required reading and research assessment tasks.

Areas of Interest Law
Assumed Knowledge and
Required Skills
The course is pitched at students who have never studied psychology and also aims to extend those who have studied psychology.  Researching interdisciplinary law and psychology literature databases as well as reading empirical psychological reports will be skills taught in the course.
Requisite Statement

Completed or completing five LAWS courses at 1000 level.

Recommended Courses The course focuses mainly on the psychology of criminal justice.  Those who have studied and enjoyed Criminal Law and Procedure, Criminal Justice, and/or Selected Topics in Criminal Law should enjoy this course.
Prescribed Texts
A Kapardis, Psychology and the Law: A Critical Introduction (2nd Edition, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003).
Preliminary Reading

Consult course outline for Week 1 reading.

Indicative Reading List Please consult the course outline.
Technology Requirements Students need access to WebCT to complete this course.
Academic Contact Mark Nolan

The information published on the Study at ANU 2010 website applies to the 2010 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2009 website.

Updated:   13 Nov 2015 / Responsible Officer:   The Registrar / Page Contact:   Student Business Solutions