This book develops a sociological account of lie detection practices and uses this to think about lying more generally. Bringing together insights from sociology, social history, socio-legal studies and science and technology studies (STS), it explores how torture and technology have been used to try to discern the truth. It examines a variety of socio-legal practices, including trial by ordeal in Europe, the American criminal jury trial, police interrogations using the polygraph machine, and the post-conviction management of sex offenders in the USA and the UK. Moving across these different contexts, it articulates how uncertainties in the use of lie detection technologies are managed, and the complex roles they play in legal spaces. Alongside this story, the book surveys some of the different ways in which lying is understood in philosophy, law and social order. Lie Detection and the Law will be of interest to STS researchers, socio-legal scholars, criminologists and sociologists, as well as others working at the intersections of law and science.
Author(s): Andrew Balmer
Series: Law, Science and Society Series
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2018
Language: English
Pages: 194
Tags: Lie Detection, Law, Torture, Technology, Truth
Cover......Page 1
Title......Page 4
Copyright......Page 5
Contents......Page 6
Author biography......Page 7
Acknowledgements......Page 8
1 Torture, technology and truth......Page 10
2 Truth and lies from torture to technology......Page 32
3 The polygraph machine in the United States criminal courts......Page 53
4 The exclusionary toolkit......Page 72
5 Polygraph uncertainties in the law......Page 92
6 Polygraph interrogations......Page 114
7 Subjects of suspicion......Page 143
8 Lying......Page 171
Appendices......Page 186
Appendix 1 Source materials used for case of Daniel Gristwood......Page 188
Appendix 2 Source materials used for case of Peter Reilly......Page 190
Index......Page 192