Merged - Document Seminar 1
Merged - Document Seminar 1
Merged - Document Seminar 1
2
Psychology' s Premises,
Methods and Values
Brian R. Clifford
University of East London
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On the surface it would seem as if law and psychology share common concerns
in that they are both trying to understand and predict human behaviour. In short,
both law and psychology take human nature as their subject matter. However,
beyond this commonality of focus, closer inspection would seem to reveal that
the two disciplines appear to diverge at the levels of value, basic premises,
their models, their approaches, their criteria of explanation and their methods.
Thus, while both psychology and substantive law, legal processes and
jurisprudence all address assumptions about the causes and modifications of
behaviour, about the process of perception, memory, recognition and decision
making, and about how people think and feel, in the past mutual facilitation
has been marked by its absence. Why is this?
Arguments have been made (e.g. Tapp, 1969) that while law is value-laden
and subjective, relying upon tradition and precedent, psychology is value-free
and objective, relying upon empirical research. Again, it has been asserted that
law is a practical art, a system of rules, a means of social control, concerned
with solving practical problems. Psychology, on the other hand, is a science,
concerned with the description, explanation, understanding, prediction and
control of human behaviour.
Haward (1979) talks of law as being an 'abattoir of sacred cows' for
psychology, in so far as all the beliefs that psychologists are thought to hold
dear are disputed by lawyers. Philosophically, the psychologist believes in
some degree of determinism (or causality), whereas the lawyer believes in free
will. Thus, while the psychologist tends to talk in terms of causes o/behaviour
the lawyer talks in terms of reasonsfor behaviour. The law conceives of people
as freely and consciously controlling their own behaviour, choosing their
actions and thus taking responsibility for them. As Bentley (1979) points out,
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consciousness and free will are axiomatic in legal theory. This does not sit well
with psychology, which has a different explanatory framework.
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PSYCHOLOGY'S PREMISES
Psychology claims to be both a theoretical science and at the same time an
applied discipline, able to serve in the practical affairs of the world (Clifford,
1981). It makes this claim because, as a discipline, it sees itself as objective,
empirical, eclectic and humane. Underpinning this self-perception is the
acceptance of a number of premises.
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Psychology accepts that science is but one approach to the discovery and
ordering of knowledge. It is taken to be different from common sense,
metaphysics, religion, magic, tradition, rationalism and phenomenology, not
because of its subject matter, but because of its methodology. Psychology is
unified and distinct because of its method or logic of discovery. Specific
techniques vary between and within different sub-disciplines of psychology,
but the basic method remains the samecareful, controlled observation,
rational and constrained reasoning and the subjecting of theories to empirical
test. Description is the empirical goal of psychology and explanation is the
theoretical goal.
Premise 2: Acceptance of the Basic Assumptions of the
Scientific Enterprise
The psychological approach is guided by assumptions that are unproven and
unprovable. They are necessary prerequisites for the conduct of scientific
discoursethey constitute the axiomatic substructure of psychology.
Nature is orderly and regular. Events do not occur haphazardly. Change itself
displays patterns that can be understood. This belief applies to all people,
conditions and phenomena.
We can know nature. This is an important axiom for psychology because it
assumes that humans are just as much a part of nature as are other natural
objects, and although they possess unique and distinctive characteristics they
can yet be understood and explained by the same methods as all science.
Individuals and groups exhibit sufficiently recurring, orderly and empirically
demonstrable patterns as to be amenable to scientific study.
Nothing is self-evident. Claims for truth must be demonstrated objectively.
Tradition, subjective belief and common sense are not sufficient for
verification. Herein lies the sceptical and critical attitude of psychology.
Knowledge is acquired from the acquisition of experience. This emphasis on
empirical knowledge is a counter to the belief that knowledge is innate in
humans and that pure reason is sufficient to produce verifiable knowledge.
Premise 3: Acceptance of the Rules of Scientific Enquiry
The pre-theoretical axioms listed above break through to the surface when we
examine the rules of science. These are many but the chief ones are as follows.
Use operational definitions. Operationism means that terms must be defined
by the steps or operations used to measure them.
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Problem
Generalisation
Data analysis
Hypothesis
Research design
Measuring
instruments
Figure 1.2.1
Research designs. The nature of the hypotheses generated and the embedding
theory and experimentation that are known to be relevant to it will suggest how
best to go about testing predictions. Different research methods and
experimental designs each have their good and bad points. The selection of the
appropriate design is as much an art as it is a science.
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Data collection. Once again, decisions have to be made concerning the timing,
duration, amount and nature of data to be collected. A basic issue, because of
the reliance of experimental psychology on statistical analysis, is that the data
should be quantifiable in some way, either initially or at least eventually. This
is one of the areas where the psychologist and the psychiatrist can most clearly
be differentiated. Unlike the psychologist, the psychiatrist is concerned to
listen to the utterances of a person and then engage in interpretation of these
utterances. However, when psychiatrists employ tests to aid their interpretation
they are coming closer to the psychologist, because these tests will have
involved standardisation on large numbers of people initially.
METHODS OF PSYCHOLOGY
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troublesome, not terminal. Having looked at the premises, we can now move
on to look at the methods that psychology employs.
The true experiment, defined as the random allocation of subjects (i.e. people)
to experimental conditions and the manipulation of one or more independent
variables, is believed to be the best way to disentangle cause and effect
relationships. By randomly allocating people to experimental conditions any
individual difference factors, due to the individuality of these different people,
. are spread throughout the experimental design and thus, while these human
differences may dilute any real effects that are present, they will not distort the
true effects. By varying only one or a few variables while holding all other
conditions constant this allows fairly unambiguous delineation of cause and
effect relationships.
The key feature of the experimental method involves careful manipulation or
change of some aspect of a situation and observing the effects this change has
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on some behaviour or thought process of interest, in order to establish
' relationships. The event, condition or situation that is manipulated is called the
independent variable (a variable being something that can assume different
valuese.g. noise: high, medium or low), so called because it is under the
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control of the experimenter and independent of the people taking part in the
experiment. The physical, psychological or social changes which are measured
are called the dependent variable (because the changes depend on the values
of the manipulated variablee.g. increased, decreased or unchanged
reasoning performance). Changes in the dependent variable are usually
recorded as, or translated into, numbers to allow statistical procedures to be
applied to them.
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The basic experimental design involves two groups of people (subjects): the
experimental group, which has the independent variable applied to or withheld
from it, and the control group, which does not experience any experimental
manipulation at all. This basic design can be, and usually is, greatly increased
in complexity.
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There are a number of intrinsic but not insuperable problems in the true
experiment as far as the law is concerned. First, in experimental analyses it is
the means of the groups that are compared and, because of individual
differences, it is possible that any one person in a particular group will be better
or worse than the mean score would suggest. That is, group means may not
represent the performance of any one individual in that group. This has the
implication that, for example, a mean difference between adult and child
witness groups, in favour of adults, may mask the fact that some children
actually outperformed some adults.
A second problem is that significance is evaluated in terms of presence or
absence, not size. But 'significance' does not equal 'importance'; it simply
indicates that it is unlikely that the effect came about by chance. Most psychological research has not been analysed by the power statistics recommended
by Cohen (1977; Cohen and Cohen, 1975) despite these being readily available
and computationally simple. Thus we need to know not only that an effect is
present, but whether it is large enough to matter for practical purposes.
Yet another issue raised concerning the experimental method is its artificiality.
Rabbitt (1981) calls it a tenuous abstraction of real-life situations. This raises
questions of internal and external validity. Internal validity refers to the degree
to which we can be sure that variation in the dependent variable is due to
manipulation of the independent variable. External validity refers to the extent
to which the results of an experiment can be generalised to other situations,
other subjects and other tasks. The problem is that, in general, as you increase
one type of validity so you reduce the validity of the other. External validity
is often talked about in terms of ecological validity, but the two are somewhat
different. External validity refers to subject representativeness (can we
extrapolate from rats to humans?), variable representativeness (do findings
with 'white noise', which is known to cause arousal, generalise to the arousal
present in rape situations?), and the setting representativeness of the study (do
findings obtained from people watching a rape scene on a video recorder
correspond to findings obtained from victims or witnesses actually involved
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Despite all these objections the experimental method is still the linchpin of the
psychological endeavour. This is so because, despite its acknowledged
weaknesses, the true experiment is still the best method of ascertaining
knowledge in situations where it is practical and ethical to conduct such a study.
All the other research methods available, and used by the psychologist, have
their own problems which, on balance, are more problematic than the
experimental method.
However, in certain situations the true experiment is not available as an option
and other methods must be adopted, as described below.
Case Studies
Case study research can be of two types: archival case histories or case studies
proper. In the first, a researcher surveys the case records of many people, trying
to discern trends or patterns. Such study can provide important descriptive
information but not much else. The second type of case study involves
longitudinal studies of single subjects over time with many observations being
made. There are several problems with this type of research: there is no
adequate baseline against which to compare change; because they are
idiographic (based upon one person), generalisation is problematic; because
variables are hopelessly confounded, causality cannot be unambiguously
ascribed. Thus, the most we can have are interesting hypotheses.
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onset) of behaviour will also have to be made. The biggest drawback to this
form of research is that you are at the mercy of events. If the event of interest
does happen then other things may be happening at the same time, either seen
or not seen by the researcher. If this is the case, then again we have major
problems of ascribing causality. To the extent that these methods cannot ascribe
causality, then this type of research is merely illustrative, descriptive,
interesting or suggestive.
Correlational Studies
These types of study look for relationships between two or more factors or
variables, at least one of which is not controlled by the researcher. The
correlational approach has been a valuable tool in the history of psychology,
especially in the fields of personality, social and intellectual development. It
is mainly used when manipulation is impossible or impractical. Multiple
regression or factor analysis, in which many variables are inter-correlated,
have frequently been employed with this type of method to determine the
presence or importance of relevant clusters of common factors or correlations.
The problem with correlational studies is that correlation does not mean
causation. All that a correlation study can show is one of two things: if there
is no correlation then there can be no causal relationship between or among
the variables being investigated; if, however, there is a statistically significant
correlation between or among variables, causation cannot be deduced. This is
because of the possibility of a mediating, but undetected, truly causal variable
being present. Thus, a significant correlation can only be suggestive of
causality, never definitively so.
Quasi Experimental Designs
Here we can directly manipulate the independent variable but we cannot
randomly allocate subjects to experimental conditions. Because such designs
are always dealing with intact groups (i.e. pre-existing different groups of
people) within specific experimental conditions, causality is always
problematical because other factors could be acting as confounds between
these intact groups, falsely'suggesting'that the independent variable is having
an effect.
Questionnaire Research
This is a popular methodology of social psychologists. It can produce a huge
amount of data on a wide range of issues in a short space of time. However, it
has several difficulties and disadvantages. The questions asked have to be very
carefully composed, the responses have to be considered in terms of the level
of measurement that they will yield, and not everyone returns their
questionnaire. This immediately causes problems of sampling and the possible
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Qualitative Research
This approach is used by social psychologists and by developmental!sts who
explain behaviour by underlying changes in structures and mechanisms that
are related to age. The data sought are qualitative rather than quantitative, and
are concerned with the feelings, concepts and imagery that people have about
the issue under investigation. This type of research is being strengthened by
the development of discourse analysis, and other quasi-quantifiable techniques
such as Q sort, which gets people to sort a large number of statements into a
rank order and then proceeds to interpret the groupings or cluster of
respondents giving similar rank orderings. Thus, Q sort scales people, not
items, and this analysis is aided by computerised statistical programs.
Statistical Methods
All the above research methodologies try to exercise some sort of experimental
control over the responses of interest. It is, however, also possible to exercise
statistical control. The major statistical technique is multiple regression. This
technique is employed by those who accept that all behaviour is multidetermined and complex. Multiple regression assumes independent variables
are correlated but that it is possible to separate out the individual and joint
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contribution of any factor to any dependent variable of interest. Thus, the
contribution of age, sex, birth position, economic status, amount of television
watched, previous offending, racial type, and so on, could all be looked at
together in multiple regression analysis and the individual and collective
contribution of each of these variables to, for example, delinquent behaviour
could be assessed. There are other equally powerful statistical techniques that
psychologists are increasingly employing as an alternative to tight
experimental control over variables, especially where such control is difficult
or unethical.
These then are the many and varied techniques that psychologists have at their
disposal. The technique chosen will always be that which gives greatest control
over variance (variability within subjects and between experimental
conditions) and sources of error. Thus the methodology eventually chosen for
use will be that which maximises induced variance, minimises error variance
and controls extraneous variance, as far as the situation allows.
Having said this, however, a sensible approach that should be adopted by any
psychologist who knows that his or her findings are going to be applied, or
may be applied at some future date, is to validate initial findings by convergent
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operations. That is, attempt to obtain the same findings despite using several
different methodologies, tasks and experimental populations. In addition,
while it is true that the research method is a question of logic and not of
location, ecological validity dictates that different situations of mundane
realism be sampled also. Replication is the backbone of science and unless and
until replications, replications with refinements, and conceptual replications
have been undertaken no psychologists worth their salt would allow their
results to go forward as solid and thus pertinent to practical issues.
VALUES IN PSYCHOLOGY
I began by arguing that psychologists comprise a wide range of specialisms.
It was not always so. As psychology evolved from the 1890s onwards and
established itself as an empirical science being based on systematic
observation rather than reason alone, it developed and separated into a small
number of loosely coherent schools best characterised by busy confusions with
occasional transient clear directions. Such schools declined after the 1940s and
this way of looking at psychology is no longer profitable. Their influence lives
on but the organisation of psychology is now along different lines, and may
best be conceived of in terms of perspectives, fields of interest or domains of
operations or specialisms. That is, different groups believe that their particular
approach offers the best value in understanding human beings.
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their behaviour, but gaining a richer insight into their unique traits, or view
each person as a constellation of known traits and thus somewhat predictable
in known situations. Their methods will involve personality questionnaires,
repertory grids, observation and correlational studies.
Clinical and counselling psychologists share the same focus but are differently
trained. Clinical psychologists are not medically trained (as psychiatrists are),
but they do deal with abnormal and psychiatric behaviour of all types.
Counselling psychologists, while often concerned with abnormal behaviour,
tend to be concerned with less severe forms of abnormality. However, because
both are engaged in the application of psychological principles at the point of
breakdown, and with the diagnosis and treatment of emotional and behavioural
problems, they will be concerned with mental illness, drug addiction, marital
and family conflicts and, especially counselling psychologists, less serious
adjustment problems. As mentioned above, clinical psychologists may have a
.psychoanalytic orientation but, especially in the UK, the behaviouristic,
cognitive and personality approach is also widely present.
Educational psychologists usually deal with individual children who have
emotional or learning problems and thus could have an important role to play
in several areas of the law as it relates to children. Their methods will involve
psychometric testing, observation and case histories.
From the above it is likely that when a lawyer comes to the discipline of
psychology he or she may be excused for exclaiming 'what discipline?'. So
what is it that binds these disparate activities together? What principle brings
about coherence? The answer is that, whatever the nature of activity being
investigated, there is always a level of analysis beyond the 'what' level. This
deeper level asks the question 'how' and 'why'. These questions are the focus
of all professionals who called themselves psychologists, and it is the nature
of the answers to these questions which cause the 'bewildering confederacy'
of psychology to cohere, despite their very different methods of enquiry
concerning the addressing of these questions.
This broad-stroke insight into what psychology is and is not should help you
appreciate and understand what is to follow in subsequent chapters of this
volume. The assumptions and working methods of a wide variety of
psychologists have been outlined and the core relevance of psychology to law
as a discipline, and as a body of professionals, has at least been hinted at.
REFERENCES
Banaji, M.R.. and Crowder, R.G. (1989). The bancruptcy of everyday memory.
American Psychologist, 44, 1185-93.
Bentley, D. (1979). The infant and the dream: psychology and the law. In
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Bull, R., & Carson, D. (Eds.) (1995). Handbook of psychology in legal contexts. Chichester: Wiley.
Chapter 1.3
Law's Premises,
Methods and Values
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David Carson
University of Southampton
It cannot, meaningfully, be claimed that the study of law has a longer history
than the study of behaviour. However, the formalised study of law, in
universities and similar institutions, certainly has a much longer history than
the study of psychology. Closely associated with this is the differential role,
significance and appeal of tradition, plus the differential distribution of status,
between the two disciplines and professions. Generally speaking, the law, its
study and practice, is perceived as a more socially prestigious activity. Even
in the allegedly more egalitarian USA, law professors are paid on higher scales
than their other non-medical colleagues. It is proclaimed to be a success or
advance when some psychologists are appointed to law departments (Melton,
Monahan and Saks, 1987; Losel, 1992). Why should we not seek the
appointment of lawyers in psychology departments? Indeed, particularly in
some continental European countries, the prestige and perceived power of
lawyers, practising and academic, is considered to be an obstacle to the
development of work in law and psychology. (Unfortunately neither of these
'problems', higher pay and social esteem, are experienced by academic
lawyers in the UK!)
Tradition is important to lawyers. It is observable not just in the continued use
of outdated courtroom clothes and modes of address. Such clothes and
terminology would, surely, lead to rich laughter were not lawyers, aided and
abetted by media representations, so successful in maintaining a hegemony of
ideas and assumptions held by members of the public (Bankowski and
Mungham, 1976). These particular customs may be most dramatic in the UK
but they exist in most jurisdictions. Superficially such traditions might appear
relatively unimportant, indeed endearing. However, the uncritical manner in
which they are justified is significant. For example, it is often asserted that a
formal and dignified atmosphere in a courtroom, with witnesses in awe of the
setting and dramatis personae, is an aid to truth-telling by witnesses. The
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The long tradition of scholarship in law has, naturally, led to a substantial body
of legal philosophy wherein some basic questions about the nature, purpose
and role of law have been posed. The breadth, and depth, of this work, and its
reflection in legal education which helps to socialise future generations of
lawyers, begins to explain lawyers' relative lack of interest in behavioural
science topics. The detailed content of the different theories and positions,
regarding the nature of law and justice, can be discovered from most student
texts. Here the purpose is to highlight features of lawyers' reasoning. A
common theme is the essence of law and justice.
For many people there are certain 'truths', revealed in different ways. For
example, different countries' constitutions declare certain propositions to be
beyond challenge, inalienable. The Constitution of the USA declares certain
truths to be self-evident. Certain propositions, for example that a constitution
is a manifestation of the will of the people, defy empirical verification.
Doubtless such a test was never envisaged. The appeal of the declaration is to
senses other than reason. Arguably similar are the declarations of basic rights,
such as the European Convention on Human Rights. They gain 'legal'
authority, so as to become enforceable, if and when they are adopted by a
legislature. But they also have an appeal and authority arising from their
reference to apparently universal principles, applicable at all times and in all
countries. Not surprisingly many lawyers are keen to encourage the
articulation of such statements. Sometimes the 'intellectual power' or authority
of the document arises from 'reason'; it is asserted to be self-evident, for
example, that continued use of the world's natural resources, on current scales,
is unsustainable. At other times their power arises from sympathy with the
implicit values or philosophy, which may be religious in character.
If there are 'basic truths' then, the argument runs, they cannot be overridden
by any other laws. Many lawyers share the widespread belief that there are
certain 'natural' or fundamental laws. Even the young Karl Marx, for instance,
argued that:
Laws are not rules that repress freedom any more than the law of gravity is a
law that represses movement... laws are rather positive lights, general norms,
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undermining the accusing child's credibility. They will utilise their belief in
the law as a neutral 'technology', will argue that they are only doing their job
which, in the context of the system, is non-political. If it is in their client's
interests to have separate trials, then they must be expected; indeed, in the
terms of the system they are operating, they should be praised when they
achieve this, even if it means that one jury fails to get a full picture of the case
against the defendant.
Note the extent to which law involves a culture of criticism. Trials, civil or
criminal, usually only involve two sides and two sets of lawyers. A base-rate
probability of 50 per cent failure in trials has to be managed by the lawyers
themselves and rationalised to their clients. Appeals against judges' decisions
are not rare events but rather are structured into the legal system. Is there any
other occupation which so regularly and systematically encourages criticism
via appeals? Whilst an appeal court's criticisms may be couched in polite and
circumspect language it is performed in public and involves disagreeing with
at least one judge or a trial lawyer. Thus lawyers may reasonably feel, and
argue, that the legal system is open and accountable in a way that few other
occupations are. The argument is not that they become blase about criticism
but that further criticism may be considered inappropriate or misguided.
Lawyers, particularly in the UK, are able to promote law reform with
remarkable ease. The Law Commission for England and Wales is chaired by
a senior judge, and has practising and academic lawyers as members. There
appears to be no perceived need for, or value in having, a commissioner with
a background in the behavioural sciences or skilled in assessing research
methodology. Papers, authored jointly by a psychologist and a lawyer and
conforming to the methods and expectations of both audiences, might be more
successful in impressing lawyers and politicians into making changes.
Challenging other lawyers, fighting with words and arguments, is part of the
art and the skills of being a lawyer (Evans, 1983). Further, not taking those
challenges and criticisms to heart, not letting what is said in court affect
personal feelings and relationships is also a prized quality. It is professional
for lawyers to challenge each other vigorously and then, just as if a switch had
been pressed, once the trial is decided or adjourned, to be open and friendly to
professional colleagues. To prevent this antagonism, challenge and criticism
from undermining self-esteem and self-justification, lawyers need to be able
to rationalise their work. Such beliefs as the duty upon lawyers (indeed the
requirement of justice), to do their very best for their client, even if they believe
their client to be guilty of a heinous crime (but do not actually know him or
her to be guilty) need to be firmly believed in if the defence lawyer is not to
feel guilty for being successful in a criminal defence.
Law in Practice
One rebellion against the positivistic emphasis upon the 'law in books' is the
realist tradition. Does it matter what the law in the books is, if it is not applied
in practice? The 'real' law, realists would argue, concerns what judges and
other law enforcement agencies actually do. Note that, in this approach, the
contribution of other legal decision-makers is recognised. If the police operate
a 10 per cent margin on speeding offences then the maximum on this road is
not 50 but 55 miles per hour. Law students should be taught not what the books
say ought to happen but what the research and experience indicates actually
happens. Fear of having your name printed in a newspaper may be a more
effective disincentive to the commission of crime than standard punishments.
The judge's mood may be a more reliable and significant factor in predicting
his or her decisions than the precedent decisions. Legal skills concern the
ability to predict the decisions of judges and others.
Thus, it is submitted, lawyers should be expected to be, at the very least, wary
or biased against reform proposals which threaten to undermine their
self-justifications. Lawyers, like everyone else, need to be able to rationalise
or justify their behaviour. It should not be surprising that they are antagonistic
to other disciplines which criticise them even when they are operating existing
law. Such criticisms are liable to be considered misconceived or misinformed.
A great deal is at stake for lawyers. For example, an inter-disciplinary
committee drew attention to 'the wide-ranging challenge to traditional notions
of evidence posed by the advance in psychology' but, nevertheless, went on
to make recommendations which it felt would not be too extreme for practising
lawyers (Oddie, 1991).
JLiaa.it.....
professional training. Thus they can become practising lawyers without having
studied any social or behavioural sciences other than that studied at school up
to the age of 18. In the USA law is a postgraduate subject so that law students
will already have studied other subjects at university as part of their Bachelor's
degree. These will often include psychology.
While law schools are still dominated by 'black letter' lawyers, whose primary
interest is in the collation, analysis and restatement of verbally formulated
rules, virtually all will have some staff interested in socio-legal studies. Indeed
the character of a law school can, substantially, be determined by the
proportion swearing allegiance to a socio-legal approach to research and/or
teaching. Many lawyers would characterise socio-legal studies as including an
interest in the psychological implications of law (e.g. Lloyd-Bostock, 1981).
It would be seen as a sub-set of the wider concept which would include politics
(e.g. Podmore, 1977), history, anthropology (e.g. Snyder, 1981), economics
(e.g. Veljanovski, 1980), indeed linguistics (e.g. Goodrich, 1984), geography
(e.g. Economides, Blacksell and Watkins, 1986) and psychiatry (e.g. Fennell,
1986) as well as the sociology of law (e.g. Cotterrell, 1986). However, the vast
majority of those lawyers interested in socio-legal studies, at least in the UK,
are interested in the sociological and political rather than the psychological
implications of law. The interest is in social theories and explanations rather
than individualistic.
The interpretativist epistemologies implicit in realist and socio-legal
approaches to law is important. The law is not perceived as politically neutral
or independent of observation and choice. All actors, including judges, are
making choices although they may be circumscribed. Interpreting and
applying the law is neither a mechanical nor a neutral activity. Factual
situations are ambiguous and have to be constructed and interpreted.
Note, however, that law schools and legal education remains dominated by
cognitive studies of information. Research findings, say on eye-witness
testimony, may find their way into 'liberal' texts on evidence. But, despite the
realist and socio-legal movements, the emphasis remains upon rule, rather than
fact, finding. The bulk of a practising lawyer's time and effort will be spent in
determining the facts rather than the law; but this is still not reflected in legal
education or law books (for an exception, see Anderson and Twining, 1991).
Emphasis upon practical skills, other than appeal court argument, is a relatively
novel development in legal education, especially in the UK (Macfarlane,
1992). Why are lawyers not being taught how to interview witnesses and
clients in a manner which will produce plenty of reliable information for them?
In straightforward terms of gaining instrumental skills lawyers could learn
much from psychologists, even if the limits of current knowledge, and need
for further research, kept being emphasised.
The socio-legal movement is related to interests in criminology and concern
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REASONABLE REASONING
This, necessarily selective and all too superficial, review of the range of ideas
or schools of thought within jurisprudence or legal philosophy should have
indicated the breadth and diversity of views and approaches that exist. It would
be very misguided to think of lawyers as being less diverse in their assumptions
and methods than are other disciplines. The discussion also, hopefully,
indicated a number of ways in which particular positions, within this diversity,
could facilitate or hinder developments with psychology. To this should be
added a brief description of some characteristics of lawyers' practical
reasoning. Aubert (1963), for example, has outlined a number of characteristics
which has led others (Campbell, 1974) to argue that effective collaboration is
unlikely. However, it will be argued, these characteristics arise out of the
courtroom focus of some lawyers which is, substantially, just a stereotypical
image of lawyers' work.
Lawyers, for example, tend to dichotomise. Both concepts and facts (to indulge
in a dichotomy) are pressed into categories, particularly alternatives. It is one
thing, although dangerous in many senses, for people to be pressed into
categories such as 'mentally disordered' or not, criminal damage or not, but it
extends right through to reasonable or unreasonable behaviour. Lawyers, and
the law, have great difficulty with relative concepts. However, this mirrors the
reasoning of many other groups of people and is perfectly understandable
given the legal task of fitting facts into legal categories. Lawyers, it is argued,
focus on past events, while 'proper' scientists are trying to make accurate
predictions about the future. This is true in that lawyers have to find, from past
events, facts which will permit a particular conclusion to their case. They have
to do this for legal ends. But it is not, really, different from other disciplines.
Psychologists also examine the past, for example a client's past history of
violence, in order to make decisions for the future.
Lawyers concentrate upon the particular case, their client's, while others, for
example psychologists researching the dangerousness of mentally disordered
offenders, are trying to make generalised comments. Again the argument is
not really valid. Yes, a lawyer has to try and get a particular outcome for a
particular client. Similarly a psychologist will search the literature on the topic
or about similar cases in order to help a particular client. The distinctions that
ought to be being made are between lawyers generally and those in practice,
who must work with the system, just as a distinction would be drawn between
the research psychologist's motivation to make general comments about, for
37
38
INTRODUCTION: INTERDISCIPLINARY AND INTERPROFESSIONAL
likely to emphasise the significance rather than the mere passage of time. The
expression 'day in court' is very significant to lawyers. Cases, witnesses,
clients are prepared for the 'day in court' even though the vast majority of civil
cases are settled before any trial and the vast majority of prosecutions lead to
admission of guilt so that a full trial is unnecessary. The day in court becomes
a focal point, not just for planning purposes. The expectation is that the court
will be able to deal with all the conflicting issues and establish a clear sense
of direction; problems and controversy in, solution out. But 'real' life is not
entirely like that. In many jurisdictions judges have, effectively, had sentencing
powers (a time component) taken away from them. They may pronounce a
five-year sentence. Doubtless that has an immediate effect (not just upon the
media) but many, particularly those with a previous criminal history, will
quickly calculate, for example, earliest dates upon which early release might
be sought. The release of prisoners and patients from conditions of detention
depends, although there are usually formal maximum terms, largely upon the
individual's preparedness and motivation, as well as the availability of
resources for community supervision. The simple linear approach to time
leaves out the significance of opportunities. The finding that children's
conception of time is different from that of adults (Goldstein, Freud and Solnit,
1973) has generally been learnt. Trials are expedited, although arguably still
not enough. But are courts in a position to seize, or ensure that others seize,
the opportunities that flow into, and possibly out of, every child's life? The
nature of a problem, particularly from a child's perspective, can change
dramatically over a comparatively short period of time.
CONCLUSION
As many have remarked, it is strange that two disciplines and professions, with
such common interests, have not collaborated more productively. This chapter
has tried to suggest that some of the reasons lie in their different approaches
and assumptions. Can co-operation be expected whenever there are major
differences between lawyers, when there is no orthodoxy about the nature of
law? Yes, it is submitted, if a number of things are always remembered. Among
these are the observation that lawyers serve at least two goals, making the
present system 'work' for their clients (even if those are just law students) and
the much broader notion of fair and efficient law (or justice). Law, like
psychology, is always developing, moving. This comment does not just refer
to changes in the content of the law but ideas about law generally.
Collaboration focused upon change, it is submitted, would prove an important
way forward.
39
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Part 2
Individualism:
Psychology's Support
for Individuals