scholarly journals Front-Stage Stars and Backstage Producers: The Role of Judges in Problem-Solving Courts

2013 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shannon Portillo ◽  
Danielle S. Rudes ◽  
Jill Viglione ◽  
Matthew Nelson
Author(s):  
David DeMatteo ◽  
Kirk Heilbrun ◽  
Alice Thornewill ◽  
Shelby Arnold

This chapter focuses on the legal and ethical considerations that are relevant to problem-solving courts. The chapter begins with a review of the constitutional considerations relevant to problem-solving courts and how they impact pleadings, consent, and competence. Next, this chapter provides an overview of the ethical issues associated with consent and confidentiality in specialty courts. Part of the discussion of legal considerations compares legal aspects of problem-solving courts to legal aspects of standard prosecution. This chapter also covers ethical implications regarding the role of the judge in specialty courts. A key topic in this area is the role of coercion/leverage, both in terms of how offenders are admitted to problem-solving courts and what actions courts take when a client is not compliant. We also examine the important role of defense counsel in problem-solving courts, focusing on how defense counsel can effectively and ethically represent defendants within a problem-solving justice framework. Finally, this chapter discusses clinical implications of the ethical challenges that are most relevant to problem-solving courts.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brett Buttliere

Over the last decade, there have been many suggestions to improve how scientists answer their questions, but far fewer attempt to improve the questions scientists are asking in the first place. The goal of the paper is then to examine and summarize synthesize the evidence on how to ask the best questions possible. First is a brief review of the philosophical and empirical literature on how the best science is done, which implicitly but not explicitly mentions the role of psychology and especially cognitive conflict. Then we more closely focus on the psychology of the scientist, finding that they are humans, engaged in a meaning making process, and that cognitive conflict is a necessary input for any learning or change in the system. The scientific method is, of course, a specialized meaning making process. We present evidence for this central role of cognitive conflict in science by examining the most discussed scientific papers between 2013 and 2017, which are, in general, controversial and about big problems (e.g., whether vaccines cause autism, how often doctors kill us with their mistakes). Toward the end we discuss the role of science in society, suggesting science itself is an uncertainty reducing and problem solving enterprise. From this basis we encourage scientists to take riskier stances on bigger topics, for the good of themselves and society generally.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Igor Grossmann ◽  
Nic M. Weststrate ◽  
Monika Ardelt ◽  
Justin Peter Brienza ◽  
Mengxi Dong ◽  
...  

Interest in wisdom in the cognitive sciences, psychology, and education has been paralleled by conceptual confusions about its nature and assessment. To clarify these issues and promote consensus in the field, wisdom researchers met in Toronto in July of 2019, resolving disputes through discussion. Guided by a survey of scientists who study wisdom-related constructs, we established a common wisdom model, observing that empirical approaches to wisdom converge on the morally-grounded application of metacognition to reasoning and problem-solving. After outlining the function of relevant metacognitive and moral processes, we critically evaluate existing empirical approaches to measurement and offer recommendations for best practices. In the subsequent sections, we use the common wisdom model to selectively review evidence about the role of individual differences for development and manifestation of wisdom, approaches to wisdom development and training, as well as cultural, subcultural, and social-contextual differences. We conclude by discussing wisdom’s conceptual overlap with a host of other constructs and outline unresolved conceptual and methodological challenges.


Author(s):  
Thomas Guntz ◽  
James L. Crowley ◽  
Dominique Vaufreydaz ◽  
Raffaella Balzarini ◽  
Philippe Dessus
Keyword(s):  

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