The New Deal established the contours and character of modern American democracy. It created an anchor and a
reference point for American politics through the struggles for racial, gender, and economic equality in the five
decades that followed it. From the consensus liberalism of the war years to the strident liberalism of the sixties
to the besieged liberalism of the eighties and through the ongoing national debates about welfare reform and Social
Security privatization, the prominent historians gathered here explore the convoluted history of the American Left.
Table of Contents
PART I. LAYING THE GOUNDWORK FOR SUCCESS
1. Interrogation and Interviewing for Criminal Justice
2. The Interview Process
3. Purposeful Interviewing and Processes
PART II. INTERVIEWING METHODS
4. Traditional, Structured, and Inferential Interviewing with Statement Analysis Techniques
5. The Forensic Hypnosis and Cognitive Interviewing
6. Behavioral Interviewing Techniques
PART III. INTERVIEWING SPECIAL POPULATIONS
7. Interviewing Children
8. Interviewing Elders
9. Interviewing Persons with Disabilities or Mental Illness
PART IV. INTERROGATION
10. Techniques for Interrogation
11. Interrogation Process and Law
12. Confessions
13. Juvenile Rights and Criminal Justice Responsibilities