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Dear all,
Below you will find information on a possibly relevant CfP for a session
on visuals in the criminal justice system,
Best wishes,
Gabry

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Dr. Gabry Vanderveen
Institute for Criminal Law and Criminology
Leiden Law School
Leiden University
PO Box 9520
2300 RA Leiden
The Netherlands


CFP: Cross-examining visuals in the criminal justice system 
(session E, Visual Sociology Thematic Group, International Sociological
Association)

Buenos Aires, Argentina
1-4 August 2012
Abstract submission deadline: December 15, 2011
Notification of acceptance: January 31, 2012
Full paper deadline: June 1 2012
Registration deadline: April 10, 2012
Organizer of session: Gabry Vanderveen, Leiden University,
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More information and general instructions:
http://www.isa-sociology.org/buenos-aires-2012/tg/tg.php?n=TG05.


Working under the International Sociological Association (ISA), the
Visual Sociology Thematic Group (TG05) will hold its mid-term conference
in ISA's Forum on Social Justice and Democratization, 1-4 August 2012,
in Buenos Aires, Argentina and will focus its sessions on Visual
Activism and Social Justice. One of the sessions (session E) is titled
Cross-examining visuals in the criminal justice system. 

Besides courtroom drawings and mug shots, nowadays one can also browse
websites in order to locate registered sex offenders living in one's
neighbourhood, map (criminal) incidents or watch tapes from surveillance
cameras in order to help the police catch 'the bad guys'. In the
courtroom itself visuals are used increasingly. Earlier, photographs,
for example of suspects, wounds of the victim, fingerprints and so on,
and X-rays were introduced. Thanks to tremendous developments in
technology, software and new media, this has been followed by videotaped
confessions or testimonies, surveillance camera footage, computer
animations and simulations, DNA-profiles, various medical imaging
technologies and footage from cameras in the courtroom. 
One might debate that visuals with respect to the incident and the
defendant are incriminating by their nature: CCTV footage and mug shots
are not neutral. Neither are visuals focusing on the victim's suffering
(wounds, chalk lines to indicate a body) or simulations of a crime
scenario. If so, this calls for a critique of victim's and defendant's
rights, for example with respect to privacy, a fair trial and the so
called equality of arms. Several questions are important to address. How
are crime-related visuals used, by whom and with what purpose? Are they
used as an illustration or as evidence both by the prosecutor and the
defense? Do all parties have equal access and opportunities to create
and employ these images? How do the images find their way from the
criminal justice system to press coverage and popular culture, and how
does this relate to issues of privacy of the people involved?

A critique on visuals in the criminal justice system is even more
important because research from other disciplines (e.g. experimental
psychology) on cognitive processes points out that visual information
has different consequences than verbal information. For example, several
studies show that mock jurors exposed to photographic evidence instead
of written or spoken transcripts are more emotionally affected; more
often give a guilty verdict, give higher monetary awards to the victim.
Exposure to photographs, video or computer animation leads to higher
rates of condemnation and higher estimates of the degree of atrocity and
can lead to lower standards of proof. In other words, these and other
experiments show that visuals have different consequences compared to
textual (or verbal) descriptions. What does this mean for people's
rights, for justice?
 
Visuals have real consequences, leading to individual, legal, social and
political (re)actions, affecting victims, defendants, their families and
the public at large. This panel brings together papers on crime-related
visuals in the criminal justice system, the meaning and consequences of
these visuals for people's ideas, opinions, and the victim's and
defendant's rights. Each paper will discuss the (national) legal or
ethical context and the implications of the visuals for the persons
involved. In general, this panel aims to contribute to a solid
political, social and legal discussion on the fair use of visuals by the
police and in court.