Review of “Ideology, Psychology, and Law”
Posted by The Situationist Staff on May 30, 2012
Over at The Jury Expert, You can read an insightful review (by Rita R. Handrich, PhD) of Jon Hanson’s recent book, “Ideology, Psychology, and Law” (Oxford University Press). [Introductory chapter available, here].
It opens this way:
Trial consultants, and the very best trial lawyers, practice with an awareness of the law, the domain of the case facts, and the way jurors are likely to understand and misunderstand all of it. If these avenues of thought had a single intersection, you would find that Jon Hanson has been living on that corner for 25 years. As a Harvard Law School professor and prolific writer, he has done much to keep me and many others informed of the traffic coming from these diverse directions. . . .
Read the entire review here.
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This entry was posted on May 30, 2012 at 12:01 am and is filed under Law, Politics, Ideology, Book, Situationist Contributors. Tagged: Social Psychology, Ideology, social cognition, Jon Hanson, book review. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.


















Review of “Ideology, Psychology, and Law” « The Situationist « About Psychology said
[...] here to see the original: Review of “Ideology, Psychology, and Law” « The Situationist May 30th, 2012 | Tags: Case, Domain, the-case, the-domain, the-law, these-avenues, thought-had, [...]