
Author: Jessica D. Findley
Edition: 1
Binding: Kindle Edition
ISBN: B009HBDLHM
Edition: 1
Binding: Kindle Edition
ISBN: B009HBDLHM
The Science of Attorney Advocacy: How Courtroom Behavior Affects Jury Decision Making (Law and Public Policy: Psychology and the Social Sciences)
Successful advocacy approaches are essential for the practice of law. Get The Science of Attorney Advocacy: How Courtroom Behavior Affects Jury Decision Making (Law and Public Policy diet books 2013 for free.
Lawyers, law professors, judges, and other legal commentators have offered numerous recommendations for how trial lawyers can persuade juries, including techniques in verbal and nonverbal communication, attorney demeanor, and so forth. These recommendations have been put into trial practice handbooks and are frequently taught in law schools as part of the trial advocacy curriculum. However, they often rely on popular assumptions or intuition rather than social and behavioral science. Research is needed to differentiate intuition and speculation from scientific proof of efficacy.This book fills this critical gap by reviewing the scientific support for popular advocacy recom Check The Science of Attorney Advocacy: How Courtroom Behavior Affects Jury Decision Making (Law and Public Policy our best diet books for 2013. All books are available in pdf format and downloadable from rapidshare, 4shared, and mediafire.

The Science of Attorney Advocacy: How Courtroom Behavior Affects Jury Decision Making (Law and Public Policy Download
Lawyers, law professors, judges, and other legal commentators have offered numerous recommendations for how trial lawyers can persuade juries, including techniques in verbal and nonverbal communication, attorney demeanor, and so forth. These recommendations have been put into trial practice handbooks and are frequently taught in law schools as part of the trial advocacy curriculum. However, they often rely on popular assumptions or intuition rather than social and behavioral science. Research is needed to differentiate intuition and speculation from scientific proof of efficacy awyers, law professors, judges, and other legal commentators have offered numerous recommendations for how trial lawyers can persuade juries, including techniques in verbal and nonverbal communication, attorney demeanor, and so forth. These recommendations have been put into trial practice handbooks and are frequently taught in law schools as part of the trial advocacy curriculum. However, they often rely on popular assumptions or intuition rather than social and behavioral science. Research is needed to differentiate intuition and speculation from scientific proof of efficacy.This book fills this critical gap by reviewing the scientific support for popular advocacy recom
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