As a guide to the most up-to-date thinking on the science and ethics of interrogation, this book is a highly valuable contribution. Given its wide disciplinary range and substantive breadth, it holds novel and illuminating insights for even the most well-read torture researcher.
Mark Berlin, Ethics and International Affairs
Interrogation and Torture is an important step in the right direction.
Marie Steinbrecher, Human Rights Review
Interrogation and Torture is a crucial and compelling contribution to the global fight against torture, arriving at a time when the acceptance of torture-incredibly-seems to be on the rise in some important quarters. Among the remarkable contingent of 36 contributors from 14 different countries, you will notably find the current, and two former, UN Special Rapporteurs on Torture. And perhaps most significantly, I believe this invaluable book can help build a historic bridge between the human rights and law enforcement communities. Sometimes assumed to be adversarial, this book proves that their logics are remarkably similar when it comes to effective interrogation.
Andrew Gilmour, Assistant Secretary-General for Human Rights, United Nations OHCHR
Criminal investigators are the purveyors of truth-the core objective of any interview or interrogation. The talented team of contributions in this book provide unprecedented clarity on this matter to those seeking to protect national security and the public safety. In doing so they offer sound guidance to improve the practice of obtaining accurate and reliable information, ensuring that those who employ the methods adhere to a code of ethics, integrity, and the law.
David Brant, Former Director of the U.S. Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS)
The chapters found in this genuine page-turner offer valuable programs of action: the science presented by researchers and practitioners plainly guides us toward rapport-based interrogation because of its efficacy; international law experts call for a standard-setting instrument for non-coercive interviews; military professionals warn of grave strategic consequences for torture policy; and psychologists propose a Truth Commission to rescue their profession. Citizen readers of this book will become informed of significant developments on interrogation crucial to public policy, and the ultimate implementation of these insights will depend on self-aware and inquiring patriots.
Jean Maria Arrigo, Social Psychologist, Recipient of the 2015 AAAS Award for Scientific Freedom and Responsibility
Of special interest here to practitioners are the chapters on the science behind what really produces reliable information — and why torture extracts only lies and faulty memories. If knowledge is a light, it is one this book lifts high, showing us the way home over dark and troubled waters.
Lt. Col. Douglas A. Pryer, US Army (Ret.)
We have been in space, we can make the blind see, and we save our photos in clouds, but we don't stop torture. We know torture is illegal and immoral, and now the emergent science shows it to be ineffective. Interrogation and Torture takes you through a dim and scary landscape, but the guides — the contributors to the volume — navigate well. The darker it is, the clearer they see. I strongly recommend this book — it's out of the ordinary; it's about life and death.
Pär Anders Granhag, Professor of Psychology, University of Gothenburg