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Investigative psychology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Investigative Psychology is the term given to a new area of applied Psychology. It brings together issues in the retrieval of investigative information, the drawing of inferences about that informati...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Investigative_psychology |
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Criminal Investigative Psychology is the area in Forensic Psychology that is least likely to be acknowledged. The majority of people see this as merely a criminal justice area of expertise. In actuality, this area is strongly associated with how the human mind works.
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Investigative Psychology. A major and rapidly expanding sub-discipline of Forensic and Criminal Psychology. ... What is Investigative Psychology?
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David Canter, Professor of Psychology founded the MSc course in Investigative Psychology. He is a Fellow of the British Psychological Society and a member of its Forensic Division and a Chartered Forensic Psychologist.
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Professor David Canter coined the term Investigative Psychology in discussion with Detective Constable Rupert Heritage, sometime in early 1990 at the University of Surrey, UK. It grew out of the recognition that there were many ways in which psychology could contribute to criminal and other investigations.
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Dr C. Gabrielle Salfati is part of the first group of people who emerged within the new field of Investigative Psychology, and was instrumental in its development as an international research field on the empirical analysis of violent criminal behaviour, in particular the advancement of the science of offender profiling.
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International Academy of Investigative Psychology; ... Investigative Psychology: Offender Profiling and the Analysis of Criminal Action ... David Canter & Donna Youngs: A ground-breaking textbook from the inventors of Investigative Psychology...
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