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Mankind
Quarterly, Vol. 45, No. 2 (Winter 2004)
pp. 217-230
Conflict Between the Goals of Social Science
and Law: What Can Psychologists Really Contribute?
Ralph Scott
In recent years there has been increasing evidence that, in
the sensitive domain of race, expert witnesses have failed to
provide balanced and useful information to representatives of
the two institutions upon which social policy formulations are
often dependent, law and social science. This paper examines
judicial expectations of expert witnesses, the refusal of some
of the nation's most knowledgeable authorities to testify on
culturally sensitive racial issues, court rulings based on conventionalized
and misleading testimony, and loss of public trust in social
science, the law, and the courts. Faulty social science presented
to the Supreme Court in the historic school desegregation case,
Brown vs. Board of Education (1954) is reviewed in the context
of coercion of social scientists whose research had indicated
the salient role of biophysical and ecological forces on the
course of human development. Ongoing fear of academics to testify
objectively for fear of personal and professional damage is
examined and a contemporary case vignette presented. Finally,
it is suggested that failure of representatives of the legal
profession to restrain inappropriate cross-examination restricts
the informational spectrum available to decision makers charged
with ruling on broad societal issues.
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