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Monitor on Psychology Volume 38, No. 7 July/August 2007 |
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CONVENTION HIGHLIGHTS Ethics and interrogation 'miniconvention' will examine role of psychologists who work in detention centers. By Laurie Meyers What role are psychologists playing in U.S. military detention centers? What ethical dilemmas do they face? What does research tell us about psychology's role in interrogations? These are some of the questions that a miniconvention on ethics and interrogation will explore at APA's 2007 Annual Convention through a series of eight sessions and a town hall meeting. "This program represents APA at its bestdeliberating in a thoughtful, organized and inclusive manner about an enormously complex and challenging issue," says Stephen Behnke, JD, PhD, director of APA's Ethics Office. Finding common ground The debate within psychology on interrogations has been sharply divided between those who believe that psychologists should lend their expertise to interrogators because their presence may help ensure that prisoners are not treated cruelly, and those who believe they have no place in interrogations that may violate human rights, notes Brad Olson, PhD, chair of the Divisions for Social Justice, a coalition of 10 APA divisions that support initiatives for social justice. In addition to the Divisions for Social Justice, other miniconveniton sponsors include: The Ethics Committee, Div. 9 (Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues), Div. 17 (Society of Counseling Psychology), Div. 18 (Psychologists in Public Service), Div. 19 (Society for Military Psychology), Div. 26 (Society for the History of Psychology), Div. 27 (Community Psychology), Div. 35 (Society for the Psychology of Women), Div. 39 (Psychoanalysis), Div. 45 (Society for the Psychological Study of Ethnic Minority Issues), Div. 48 (Society for the Study of Peace, Conflict, and Violence) and Div. 51 (Society for the Psychological Study of Men and Masculinity). "We wanted to set up participatory sessions so all types of psychologists could...find some common ground," says Olson. Diverse perspectives Miniconvention speakers will include military psychologists, human rights activists, psychologists who study conflict and multicultural issues, and a Department of Defense interrogator. The sessions will cover a wide range of issues including the use of the so-called "biscuit teams" (Behavioral Science Consultation Teams)groups of behavioral health and medical professionals at detention centers whose role in interrogations has never been clarified by the Department of Defense. Speakers will also discuss the ethical challenges military psychologists face and explore the effects of torture and abuse. "I think that this is one of the central issues for psychology todaywhether psychologists should be involved in getting information from people who don't want to give it," says Olson. The sessions and speakers are: Session 1: What are Psychologists doing in U.S. Military Detention Centers? Session 2: What Does the Research on Interrogations Tell Us? Session 3: What is the Evolution of APA policy on Ethics and Interrogation? Session 4: How do Human Rights and Laws Apply to Detention Centers? Session 5: What are the Impacts of Ethnicity, Language, and Identity on Interrogations?
Session 6: What are the Effects of Psychological Torture and Abuse? Town Hall Meeting: Review and Future Directions. Session 7: What Ethical Dilemmas do Psychologists Working in Detention Centers Face? Session 8: What challenges and complexities does providing treatment to detainees
entail?
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