Miranda's Revenge: Police Interrogation as a Confidence Game

Article Properties
Abstract
Cite
Leo, Richard A. “Miranda’s Revenge: Police Interrogation As a Confidence Game”. Law &Amp; Society Review, vol. 30, no. 2, 1996, pp. 259-88, https://doi.org/10.2307/3053960.
Leo, R. A. (1996). Miranda’s Revenge: Police Interrogation as a Confidence Game. Law &Amp; Society Review, 30(2), 259-288. https://doi.org/10.2307/3053960
Leo RA. Miranda’s Revenge: Police Interrogation as a Confidence Game. Law & Society Review. 1996;30(2):259-88.
Refrences
Title Journal Journal Categories Citations Publication Date
How Many Criminals Has Miranda Set Free? 1995
Trial and Tribulations: Courts, Ethnography, and the Need for an Evidentiary Privilege for Academic Researchers 1995b
Police Interrogation and Social Control 1994a
False Confessions: Standard Interrogations by Arizona Law Enforcement Officials Led to Four Matching Confessions to the Murders of Nine People at a Buddhist Temple. But All Four Suspects Were Innocent 1993
From Coercion to Deception: The Changing Nature of Police Interrogation in America 1992
Citations
Title Journal Journal Categories Citations Publication Date
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Suspects’ opportunities to claim their legal rights in police investigative interviews

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The Justice Gap and the Promise of Criminological Research. Russian Journal of Economics and Law

Russian Journal of Economics and Law
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Will you confess to what I did? Close relationships and in‐group membership facilitate voluntary blame‐taking

Journal of Applied Social Psychology
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  • Medicine: Internal medicine: Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry: Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system: Psychiatry
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Citations Analysis
The category Philosophy. Psychology. Religion: Psychology 27 is the most commonly referenced area in studies that cite this article. The first research to cite this article was titled The Forms of Judicial Policymaking: Civil Liability and Criminal Justice Policy and was published in 1997. The most recent citation comes from a 2022 study titled Hostage Justice and Wrongful Convictions in Japan. This article reached its peak citation in 2022, with 4 citations. It has been cited in 43 different journals, 2% of which are open access. Among related journals, the Behavioral Sciences & the Law cited this research the most, with 6 citations. The chart below illustrates the annual citation trends for this article.
Citations used this article by year