Law and Human Behavior

Law and Human Behavior is a bimonthly academic journal published by the American Psychology–Law Society. It publishes original empirical papers, reviews, and meta-analyses on how the law, legal system, and legal process relate to human behavior, particularly legal psychology and forensic psychology.[1] The current editor-in-chief is Bradley D. McAuliff (California State University, Northridge). Past editors have been Margaret Bull Kovera (John Jay College of Criminal Justice) (Brian Cutler (University of Ontario Institute of Technology), Richard Wiener (University of Nebraska), Ronald Roesch (Simon Fraser University), Michael J. Saks (Arizona State University), and Bruce Sales (University of Arizona).

Law and Human Behavior
DisciplineLegal psychology, forensic psychology
LanguageEnglish
Edited byBradley D. McAuliff
Publication details
History1977–present
Publisher
FrequencyBimonthly
2.78 (2018)
Standard abbreviations
BluebookLaw & Hum. Behav.
ISO 4Law Hum. Behav.
Indexing
CODENLHBEDM
ISSN0147-7307 (print)
1573-661X (web)
LCCN77641812
OCLC no.03173559
Links

Abstracting and indexing

The journal is abstracted and indexed by MEDLINE/PubMed and the Social Science Citation Index. According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2018 impact factor of 2.78, ranking it 11th out of 148 journals in the category "Law".[2]

gollark: I mean, you *say* that, but Mathics is a free, open-source general-purpose computer algebra system featuring Mathematica-compatible syntax and functions. It relies on a number of other Python libraries in the Python ecosystem.
gollark: Evidently we should base all our things on zero knowledge proof techniques instead of an admin.
gollark: You're quite clearly here though
gollark: Exciting.
gollark: What is the statuoid on the code guessing?

References

  1. "Law and Human Behavior". American Psychological Association. January 3, 2012. Retrieved January 3, 2012.
  2. "Journals Ranked by Impact: Law". 2019 Journal Citation Reports. Web of Science (Social Sciences ed.). Thomson Reuters. 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.