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The Everlasting Plague of Settler Colonialism in South Africa: An Autoethnographic Study on the Settler Logic of Eliminations? Assimilative Projects and its Impact Upon Understandings of Identity and the Self

Eyewitness testimonies are integral pieces of evidence in criminal justice investigations. This is because justified conviction and appropriate sentencing can flow from eyewitness testimony. However, research has demonstrated that eyewitness testimony is often unreliable, even more so, the testimony...

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Main Author: Mohedeen, Alia
Other Authors: Maluleke, Gavaza
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Political Studies 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mohedeen, Alia
author2 Maluleke, Gavaza
author_browse Maluleke, Gavaza
Mohedeen, Alia
author_facet Maluleke, Gavaza
Mohedeen, Alia
author_sort Mohedeen, Alia
collection Thesis
description Eyewitness testimonies are integral pieces of evidence in criminal justice investigations. This is because justified conviction and appropriate sentencing can flow from eyewitness testimony. However, research has demonstrated that eyewitness testimony is often unreliable, even more so, the testimony of eyewitnesses who have witnessed multiple perpetrator crimes. This is because eyewitnesses to multiple perpetrator crimes have the challenging tasks of recalling the crime scene, correctly identifying the perpetrators involved in the crime, and assigning the correct role to each perpetrator. Eyewitnesses in the current study viewed a mock crime video comprising one, two, or five perpetrators and were instructed to answer a number of crime-related questions and identify the perpetrator/s from the line-up. The line-ups were presented sequentially (with one perpetrator in each line-up) for eyewitnesses who viewed the multiple perpetrator crimes. Additionally, these eyewitnesses were required to pair each perpetrator to the role they played in the crime. Analysis of the sample (N = 226) revealed that the accuracy of eyewitnesses decreased as the number of perpetrators increased. The ‘post-identification feedback' effect has not yet been studied in multiple perpetrator crimes. Single perpetrator research demonstrates that any suggestion that the eyewitness chose the correct person from the line-up inflates eyewitness confidence. We hypothesized that the effect would also persist in eyewitnesses who viewed multiple perpetrator crimes. We analysed 1991 of the 226 eyewitnesses and found that postidentification feedback did not significantly affect eyewitness identification and role confidence
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:45:24.558Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39653 The Everlasting Plague of Settler Colonialism in South Africa: An Autoethnographic Study on the Settler Logic of Eliminations? Assimilative Projects and its Impact Upon Understandings of Identity and the Self Mohedeen, Alia Maluleke, Gavaza Political Studies Eyewitness testimonies are integral pieces of evidence in criminal justice investigations. This is because justified conviction and appropriate sentencing can flow from eyewitness testimony. However, research has demonstrated that eyewitness testimony is often unreliable, even more so, the testimony of eyewitnesses who have witnessed multiple perpetrator crimes. This is because eyewitnesses to multiple perpetrator crimes have the challenging tasks of recalling the crime scene, correctly identifying the perpetrators involved in the crime, and assigning the correct role to each perpetrator. Eyewitnesses in the current study viewed a mock crime video comprising one, two, or five perpetrators and were instructed to answer a number of crime-related questions and identify the perpetrator/s from the line-up. The line-ups were presented sequentially (with one perpetrator in each line-up) for eyewitnesses who viewed the multiple perpetrator crimes. Additionally, these eyewitnesses were required to pair each perpetrator to the role they played in the crime. Analysis of the sample (N = 226) revealed that the accuracy of eyewitnesses decreased as the number of perpetrators increased. The ‘post-identification feedback' effect has not yet been studied in multiple perpetrator crimes. Single perpetrator research demonstrates that any suggestion that the eyewitness chose the correct person from the line-up inflates eyewitness confidence. We hypothesized that the effect would also persist in eyewitnesses who viewed multiple perpetrator crimes. We analysed 1991 of the 226 eyewitnesses and found that postidentification feedback did not significantly affect eyewitness identification and role confidence 2024-05-20T11:38:38Z 2024-05-20T11:38:38Z 2023 2024-05-17T12:38:10Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39653 Eng application/pdf Department of Political Studies Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Political Studies
Mohedeen, Alia
The Everlasting Plague of Settler Colonialism in South Africa: An Autoethnographic Study on the Settler Logic of Eliminations? Assimilative Projects and its Impact Upon Understandings of Identity and the Self
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The Everlasting Plague of Settler Colonialism in South Africa: An Autoethnographic Study on the Settler Logic of Eliminations? Assimilative Projects and its Impact Upon Understandings of Identity and the Self
title_full The Everlasting Plague of Settler Colonialism in South Africa: An Autoethnographic Study on the Settler Logic of Eliminations? Assimilative Projects and its Impact Upon Understandings of Identity and the Self
title_fullStr The Everlasting Plague of Settler Colonialism in South Africa: An Autoethnographic Study on the Settler Logic of Eliminations? Assimilative Projects and its Impact Upon Understandings of Identity and the Self
title_full_unstemmed The Everlasting Plague of Settler Colonialism in South Africa: An Autoethnographic Study on the Settler Logic of Eliminations? Assimilative Projects and its Impact Upon Understandings of Identity and the Self
title_short The Everlasting Plague of Settler Colonialism in South Africa: An Autoethnographic Study on the Settler Logic of Eliminations? Assimilative Projects and its Impact Upon Understandings of Identity and the Self
title_sort everlasting plague of settler colonialism in south africa an autoethnographic study on the settler logic of eliminations assimilative projects and its impact upon understandings of identity and the self
topic Political Studies
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39653
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