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Guide to the Professional Interview: A Research-based Interview Methodology for People Who Ask Questions [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 260 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x153x26 mm, kaal: 454 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Apr-2022
  • Kirjastus: Anthem Press
  • ISBN-10: 1785277987
  • ISBN-13: 9781785277986
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 260 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x153x26 mm, kaal: 454 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Apr-2022
  • Kirjastus: Anthem Press
  • ISBN-10: 1785277987
  • ISBN-13: 9781785277986
Teised raamatud teemal:

The world is loaded with information. We enjoy immediate access to most of it through laptops, smartphones and the Internet. There is, however, a great deal of information that professionals cannot reach unless they talk to their clients, patients, job applicants and others. In fact, the number of professions in need of accurate and reliable information through professional conversations is huge. The way professionals approach these interpersonal meetings will have profound impact not only on the subsequent decisions the information-gathering is intended to support but also equally on the clients' trust in the interviewer and their organisations. No interview setting has been subjected to more systematic and critical research than police detectives in their interpersonal encounters with victims, witnesses and suspects of crime. This research has provided the police with innovative interviewing techniques. The knowledge and principles underpinning the concept of Investigative Interviewing, its models and techniques, provide more accurate and reliable information than any other known interview technique. It is founded on ethical, interpersonal communication theories and informed by cognitive and social psychology. Equally important, it is designed for practitioners and delivered through a practical step-by-step model – a model we are confident is of great utility value, far beyond police stations.



The knowledge underpinning the concept of Investigative Interviewing provides more accurate and reliable information than any other known interview technique. It is founded on interpersonal communication theories and informed by cognitive and social psychology. Equally important, it is designed for practitioners and delivered through a practical model for professional interviewing.



The world is loaded with information. We enjoy immediate access to most of it through laptops, smartphones and the Internet. There is, however, a great deal of information that professionals cannot reach unless they talk to their clients, patients, job applicants and others. When the purpose is to obtain accurate, relevant and reliable information, no professional interpersonal encounter has been subjected to more systematic and critical research than police interviews of victims, witnesses and suspects of crime. Knowledge derived from this research has formed a novel, more effective way to gather information. The concept is known as Investigative Interviewing, and throughout Interviewing Techniques for Professionals, the authors demonstrate that research-based methodology is applicable and likely to advance professional interviews within a wide range of professions. Based on the extensive feedback the authors have received as advisors and trainers from a highly diverse group of clients and participants, including prosecutors, judges, journalists, investors, recruiters, physicians, researchers, NGOs, lawyers, HR employees, immigration- taxation- child protection- food and competition authorities, to name a few, it has become evident that the concept of Investigative Interviewing is of great utility value, far beyond police stations. The pressure to perform and conclude creates working environments vulnerable to errors related to decision making. These challenges are not unique to the police. Unfortunate consequences directly related to poor interviewing can be of a social, financial and human nature. Without professional interviewing techniques, including a methodology that stimulates open mindedness, physicians, head-hunters, intelligence personnel, finance analytics, journalists and others run the risk of confirming their premature assumptions. In worst case scenarios, resulting in deaths caused by wrong treatment, refugees are deported only to face torture or executions, bankruptcy and so onThe techniques presented by the authors were specifically developed to guide interviewers through a mental and practical process that will allow them to remain open-minded to all possibilities, mitigating problems associated with premature decisions. A growing body of research shows with consensus that interviews conducted by professionals without theoretical knowledge and a methodological approach can, at worst, lead to self-fulfilling prophecies, where the interviewer only succeeds in extracting information that confirms his or her premature conceptions, opinions or assumptions. Besides providing the reader with a methodology that stimulates open-mindedness, Interviewing Techniques for Professionals will provide the reader with question techniques developed to test the interviewer`s preconceptions. It will also provide an understanding of what kind of questions reveal the most information; which questions should be asked first; which questions ought to be avoided; how questions should be presented; and, in particular, which interpersonal communication principles stimulate rapport and mitigate communication breakdowns.

Arvustused

The authors of this volume make a decisive contribution to the practice of rapport-based interviewing, a methodology that is revolutionizing the way suspects, witnesses and victims are questioned in criminal investigations and other information gathering. This revolution is long overdue: human dignity of all persons demands an end to confession-driven interrogation that all too often results in torture and illegal coercion. This book provides answers from professional experience and from rigorous scientific research.Juan E. Mendez, Professor of Human Rights Law in Residence, Washington College of Law, US In this highly informative book three very experienced and open-minded professional interviewers fully describe an evidence/research-based method of obtaining in interviews information that is as accurate, relevant, and reliable as possible.Ray Bull, DSc, Professor of Criminal Investigation, University of Derby, UK A Guide to the Professional Interview takes knowledge acquired from the police experience of interviewing victims, witnesses and suspects and illustrates how this can be generalized and applied to different professional contexts. This book has both new things to say, as well as familiar but important things said in an interesting new way. Dr. Mary Schollum, Policing and Criminal Justice Consultant, UK  Time is short, stakes are serious. Well trust our experience. Do you think I can afford time for a book? The truth is you cant afford not to. We know what works and Rachlew, Løken, and Bergestuen explain clearly what to do even when time is short.Darius Rejali, Author of Torture and Democracy (2007)

Muu info

All about Investigative Interviewing
Preface ix
Prologue xiii
Part 1
1(86)
1 Introduction
3(12)
The Starting Shot
3(2)
The Method
5(1)
Broad Scope of Application
6(3)
The Doctor-Patient Interview
9(1)
The Research Interview
10(2)
The Journalistic Interview
12(3)
2 The Foundation of the Method
15(16)
Errors of Justice--Procedural Aberrations
15(3)
The Benefits of a Methodology
18(1)
The Power Structure of the Interview
19(4)
An Open Mind
23(4)
The Aim of Professional Interviews
27(4)
3 Psychology
31(32)
Short-Term and Long-Term Memory
32(3)
The Phases of Memory
35(1)
Encoding Phase
35(1)
Storage Phase
36(1)
Storage and forgetting
37(1)
The storage phase and social influence
38(2)
Retrieval Phase
40(1)
False Memories
41(3)
Memory Enhancement Techniques for Investigative Interviews
44(1)
Lie Detection
45(2)
Body Language and Lie Detection
47(2)
No Shortcut to the Truth
49(2)
Credibility versus Reliability
51(1)
Credibility
51(1)
Body Language and Emotional Expression
52(1)
Social Status
53(1)
Abundance of Detail
54(1)
Absolutely Sure!
54(2)
The Psychology of Decision-Making
56(7)
4 Communication
63(24)
Empathy
64(4)
Active Listening
68(2)
Silence
70(2)
Body Language
72(3)
Active Listening Challenges
75(1)
Interruptions
76(3)
Metacommunication
79(5)
Norway, 2011
84(3)
Part 2
87(136)
5 The Method
89(4)
6 Planning and Preparation
93(48)
Liberate Capacity
93(2)
Time
95(2)
Physical Preparations
97(1)
The Room
98(6)
Disturbances
104(1)
A Warm Welcome
105(1)
Food and Drink
105(1)
Breaks
105(1)
Equipment
106(1)
Documentation
106(2)
More Than One Interviewer?
108(1)
Appearance
109(2)
Time and Preparations
111(1)
Scheduling the Time for the Interview
111(1)
The Interviewer's Time
112(1)
Respect for the Other Person's Time
112(1)
Shortage of Time
113(1)
What Can We Do?
114(1)
How Can We Best Manage Our Time?
115(1)
Case-Related Preparations
115(1)
Gathering Information
116(2)
Collect
118(1)
Check
119(1)
Connect
120(1)
Construct
120(2)
Consider
122(1)
Consult
123(1)
Collect
123(2)
The Med for a Strategy
125(1)
Critical Information
126(2)
Critical Information and the Construction of Hypotheses
128(2)
An Open Mind
130(5)
Mental Preparations
135(1)
Personal Motivation
136(1)
Active Listening
137(1)
Flexibility
138(1)
Self-Assessment
139(2)
7 Engage and Explain--Establishing Rapport
141(18)
The First Impression
141(1)
Expectations
142(1)
Information
142(1)
The Content of Rapport Establishment
143(1)
Presentation
144(1)
Practical Parameters
145(1)
The Parameters for the Interview
146(3)
Metacommunication
149(3)
Managing Time Shortage and Spin
152(2)
Informal Conversations
154(5)
8 The First Free Recall
159(20)
Unnecessary Questions
161(3)
The Hierarchy of Reliability
164(1)
Prompts
165(1)
Instruction
165(4)
Memory Enhancement in Practice
169(2)
Painful Details
171(1)
Varied and Adapted, but Always Open and Neutral
172(1)
Narrow or Broad? The Interviewer's Inherent Dilemma
173(2)
After the Introduction
175(1)
Active Listening in Practice
176(1)
Summarize
177(2)
9 Exploration and Clarification
179(30)
Structure the Interview
179(4)
Transparent and Impartial
183(1)
5Ws+H Questions
184(3)
Clarifying Questions
187(2)
Problematic Questions
189(1)
Leading Questions
190(2)
Multiple-Choice Questions
192(2)
Sawatsky's Method
194(4)
The Top 10 Off-the-Shelf Questions
198(1)
How Do You Ask the Question?
198(1)
Check: The Devil's in the Details
199(3)
Strategic Presentation of Critical Information
202(3)
Summary
205(4)
10 Closing the Interview
209(8)
When the End Is Good
210(1)
More Information
211(1)
What Happens Next?
212(2)
Implementation
214(3)
11 Evaluation
217(6)
Feedback
217(3)
Evaluation of the Process
220(1)
Evaluation of the Case
220(3)
Epilogue 223(4)
Acknowledgments 227(2)
Bibliography 229(8)
Index 237
Asbjørn Rachlew is a police superintendent with a PhD on Errors of Justice and a guest researcher at the Norwegian Centre for Human Rights, University of Oslo. 





Geir-egil Løken is a police superintendent at NCIS Norway. Educated as an instructor in investigative interviewing and in advanced investigation, he is also a consultant.





Svein Tore Bergestuen is a writer, consultant and instructor in journalistic interviewing techniques.