Psychology for Lawyers introduces practicing lawyers and law students to some of the key insights offered by the field of psychology. The first part of the book offers a crash course in those aspects of psychology that will be most useful to practicing attorneys, including issues such as perception, memory, judgment, decision making, emotion, influence, communication, and the psychology of justice. The second part applies the insights of research to tasks that lawyers face on a regular basis, including interviewing, negotiating, counseling, and conducting discovery. In addition, the book offers practical suggestions for improving your practice-suggestions that are grounded in the science of psychology. In short, by learning more about psychology and how to apply it, lawyers will be more effective, more successful, more ethical, and even happier. Comprehensive in discussion, this guide discusses aspects of social and cognitive psychology that are most relevant to lawyering: perception, memory, judgment, decision making, emotion, influence, communication and the psychology of justice.
The authors include clear writing drawing on lots of current and interesting examples, chapter summaries, and extensive endnotes and helpful bibliographies for each chapter for those readers desiring more depth on particular issues.
Psychology for Lawyers introduces practicing lawyers and law students to some of the key insights offered by the field of psychology. The first part of the book offers a crash course in those aspects of psychology that will be most useful to practicing attorneys, including issues such as perception, memory, judgment, decision making, emotion, influence, communication, and the psychology of justice. The second part applies the insights of research to tasks that lawyers face on a regular basis, including interviewing, negotiating, counseling, and conducting discovery. In addition, the book offers practical suggestions for improving your practice-suggestions that are grounded in the science of psychology. In short, by learning more about psychology and how to apply it, lawyers will be more effective, more successful, more ethical, and even happier. Comprehensive in discussion, this guide discusses aspects of social and cognitive psychology that are most relevant to lawyering: perception, memory, judgment, decision making, emotion, influence, communication and the psychology of justice.
The authors include clear writing drawing on lots of current and interesting examples, chapter summaries, and extensive endnotes and helpful bibliographies for each chapter for those readers desiring more depth on particular issues.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Produkt-Hinweis
Maße
Höhe: 254 mm
Breite: 178 mm
Dicke: 31 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-61438-354-3 (9781614383543)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Jennifer K. Robbennolt is professor of law and psychology at the University of Illinois. A lawyer and Ph.D. social psychologist, Dr. Robbennolt has won numerous awards for both her teaching and writing and is well known for her integration of psychology into the study of law and legal institutions. Jean R. Sternlight is the Saltman Professor of Law at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas Boyd School of Law and also director of the Saltman Center for Conflict Resolution. A renowned scholar, Sternlight is co-author of Dispute Resolution: Beyond the Adversarial Model (Aspen 2004) and Mediation Theory and Practice (LEXIS 2001).
Jennifer K. Robbennolt is professor of law and psychology at the University of Illinois. A lawyer and Ph.D. social psychologist, Dr. Robbennolt has won numerous awards for both her teaching and writing and is well known for her integration of psychology into the study of law and legal institutions. Jean R. Sternlight is the Saltman Professor of Law at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas Boyd School of Law and also director of the Saltman Center for Conflict Resolution. A renowned scholar, Sternlight is co-author of Dispute Resolution: Beyond the Adversarial Model (Aspen 2004) and Mediation Theory and Practice (LEXIS 2001).