1. Eliciting information in official Finnish asylum interviews
- Author
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Jenny Skrifvars, Jan Antfolk, Tanja Veldhuizen, Veronica Sui, Julia Korkman, Criminology, A-LAB, and Empirical and Normative Studies
- Subjects
asylum seeker ,investigative interviewing ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,asylum interview ,asylum procedure ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,SDG 10 - Reduced Inequalities ,information gathering - Abstract
Previous research has indicated that asylum interviewers—contrary to recommendations—use more closed than open questions to elicit information. In the current study, we investigated how information is elicited in asylum interviews by analysing question-answer pairs in 105 official Finnish asylum interview transcripts. We developed a new coding framework for analysing the content and characteristics of the answers and used previously collected data on the questions. As predicted, we found that open questions elicited more new information and new key aspects of the asylum claims than other question types. We further extend on previous research by showing that the free recall phases only elicited half of all key aspects of the claims and that mis-matched answers and difficult or unanswerable questions were alarmingly common. Interviewers would benefit from more training in asking open questions and resolving misunderstandings. Revising the instructions for the free recall phase would likely increase its efficacy.
- Published
- 2022
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