Institute of Criminal Justice Studies
Launch of the Centre of Forensic Interviewing
The Centre was opened on the 15th December 2010, with an event displaying the state-of-the-art technology and cutting-edge research likely to benefit from the centre's work.




Posters
Posters presented at the launch may be downloaded here:
- Investigative Interviewing and Fraud (Shawyer & Milne)
- Developing Interviewing Skills (Clarke & Milne)
- The Effects of Age and Gender on Witness Testimony (Collins, Shawyer and Milne)
- Is Cost-Benefit Analysis Possible for Complex Cognition? (Dando et al)
- The Cognitive Interview: A Modified Procedure for Frontline Police Investigators (Dando et al)
- Victims and Witnesses of Crime: Police Officers' Perceptions of Interviewing Practices (Dando, Wilcock & Milne)
- Interviewing Preschoolers in France (Verkampt)
- Making the Best Use of Video Identification Parades (Dalton)
- Keeping a Close(d) Eye on Cognitive Load (Harris & Milne)
- Investigative Interviewing: How do Suspects Perceive the Police Interview? (McGookin)
- Can Using Cognitive Interview Techniques Improve The Quality of Information Elicited by Police Emergency Call Takers (Pearce)
- Beyond Interviewing Technique (Stein)
- How Effective is the Cognitive Interview when Aiding Recall Retrieval of Older Adults? (Prescott, Milne and Clarke)
- How Effective is the Cognitive Interview when Used with Adults with Learning Disabilities? (Prescott, Milne & Clarke)
- Child Victims of Abuse and their Experience of the Service Provided by the Police (Skelton)
- The Fallibility of Real-life Witness Statements (Newell et al)
- An Examination of Strategies and Techniques used in Police Interviews with Child-Sex Offender Suspects (Read et al)
- How does the Criminal Justivce System Accommodate for the Needs of People with Autistic Spectrum Disorder? (Richards)
- Examining Police Interviews of Serious Crime Suspects (Leahy- Harland)
- Improving Outcomes from Rape Trials (Westera)