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The globalization of behavioral science evidence about battered women: a theory of production and diffusion

✍ Scribed by Sophia I. Gatowski; Shirley A. Dobbin; James T. Richardson; Gerald P. Ginsburg


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
164 KB
Volume
15
Category
Article
ISSN
0735-3936

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✦ Synopsis


A theoretical framework is proposed for understanding how the innovative use of behavioral science evidence is both produced and diffused among members of the global legal community. Using case law analyses and interviews with key individuals involved in selected cases, we examine how battered woman syndrome (BWS) is produced and diffused between and among Australia, Canada, England, and the United States. The following diffusion mechanisms are proposed: (1) The availability and accessibility of credible dissemination sources; (2) characteristics of the overall practice environment operating in each legal culture; (3) the attitudes and knowledge of attorneys and judges about the use of scientific evidence; (4) political and social support for the use of the evidence in the legal culture; and (5) the level of structural equivalence, communication, and ``neighbor effects'' between and among legal cultures. Each mechanism is discussed and supplemented with information from interviews with individuals involved in key cases involving BWS evidence.