Police interviewing styles and confessions in Japan |
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Authors: | Taeko Wachi Kazumi Watanabe Kaeko Yokota Yusuke Otsuka Hiroki Kuraishi Michael Lamb |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Criminology and Behavioral Sciences, National Research Institute of Police Science, Kashiwa, Japan;2. Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UKwachi@nrips.go.jp;4. Shiga Prefectural Police Headquarters, Otsu, Japan;5. Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK |
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Abstract: | Psychological studies of suspects' confessions have been conducted mostly in English-speaking and European countries, and the results may not generalise to countries whose cultures and policing practices differ. In particular, the difference between Japanese and Western laws may affect the roles that police interviewers play in suspects' confessions. This study examined the interviewing techniques used by Japanese police officers and associated features of the suspects' confessions. An extensive questionnaire was completed by 276 police officers across Japan. Detailed ratings of their interview techniques were factor analysed, yielding five factors: Presentation of Evidence, Confrontation, Rapport Building, Active Listening, and Discussion of the Crime. Based on these five factors, we identified four interviewing styles: Evidence-focused, Confrontational, Relationship-focused, and Undifferentiated. When interrogators employed the Relationship-focused interviewing style, suspects were more likely to make full confessions and to provide new information. By contrast, suspects were more likely to make partial confessions and were less cooperative when the police officers employed an Evidence-focused style. |
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Keywords: | interrogation police interviewing techniques interviewing style relationship-focused confession |
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