|
Professor Edie
Greene (B.A., Stanford University; M.A., University of Colorado; Ph.D.,
University of Washington) joined the faculty at UCCS in 1986. From 1994-1995,
she served as Fellow in Law and Psychology at Harvard Law School. Professor
Greene received the College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences Award for Research
and Creative Works in 1999 and the campus-wide Faculty Award for Excellence in
Research in 2001. She is the co-author of three books, including a widely-used
textbook in psychology and law, Psychology and the Legal System (Wadsworth, 2007),
and Determining damages: The psychology of jury awards (American Psychological
Association, 2003). Hope, L., Greene, E., Memon, A., Gavisk, M., & Houston, K. (2008). A third verdict option: Exploring the impact of the Not Proven
verdict on mock juror decision making. Law
and Human Behavior. Gavisk, M., & Greene, E. (2007).
Guardianship determinations by judges, attorneys, and guardians. Behavioral Sciences and the Law, 25, 339-353. Greene, E., & Ellis, L. (2007).
Decision making in criminal justice.
In D. Carson, B. Milne, F. Pakes, K. Shalev, & A. Shawyer
(eds.) Applying Psychology to Criminal
Justice (pp. 183-200). Chichester: Wiley. Winter, R. & Greene, E. (2007). Cognition and juror decision making.
In F. Durso, R., Nickerson, S., Dumais, S., Lewandowsky & T. Perferct
(eds.) Handbook of Applied Cognition. Chicester: Wiley. Greene, E., Heilbrun, K., Fortune, W., & Nietzel, M. (2007). Wrightsman's
Psychology and the legal system. (6th edition). Belmont, CA:
Wadsworth. Smith, A., & Greene, E. (2005). Conduct and its consequences:
Attempts at debiasing jury judgments. Law and Human Behavior, 29, 505-526.
|