Introduction
Professor Granhag is the director of the research unit for Criminal, Legal and Investigative Psychology (CLIP, www.psy.gu.se/clip). The CLIP group has repeatedly been rated as one of the world-leading groups in its field. He is the funding coordinator of the Nordic Network for research on Psychology and Law. He is the past President of the European Association of Psychology and Law. He is the Editor for Applied Cognitive Psychology, and an editorial board member of nine additional journals. He has provided reviews for 50+ scientific journals. He has participated as a reviewer/panel board member for a number of national (e.g. The Swedish Research Council) and international granting agencies (e.g., Australian Research Council, Israel Science Foundation, The British Academy, National Science Foundation). He has conducted missions under contract for agencies such as the Swedish Ministry of Justice, the Swedish Government, and Human Rights First. He was appointed visiting Professor at the Scottish Institute for Policing Research (2009-2010), and he is currently visiting Professor at the Norwegian Police University College. In January 2010 he was given an award from the International Academy of Investigative Psychology for “outstanding contributions to Investigative Psychology”. He has been invited to 15+ countries worldwide to present his research to academics and practitioners, among them the U.K (incl MI5), Germany, China, Japan, Russia, Canada and the U.S. (including FBI’s High Value Detainee Interrogation Group (HIG), LAPD and NYPD). He has conducted work for the U.S. Innocence Project and several mission for the UN (e.g., for UNHCR and UNICRI). His research findings have been acknowledged in international media such as Der Spiegel, New York Times, Newsweek, LA Times, The Guardian, Business Weekly, The Boston Globe, New Scientist, Science Daily and Wall Street Journal.
Expert
Professor Granhag is the director of the research unit for Criminal, Legal and Investigative Psychology (CLIP, www.psy.gu.se/clip). The CLIP group has repeatedly been rated as one of the world-leading groups in its field. He is the funding coordinator of the Nordic Network for research on Psychology and Law. He is the past President of the European Association of Psychology and Law. He is the Editor for Applied Cognitive Psychology, and an editorial board member of nine additional journals. He has provided reviews for 50+ scientific journals. He has participated as a reviewer/panel board member for a number of national (e.g. The Swedish Research Council) and international granting agencies (e.g., Australian Research Council, Israel Science Foundation, The British Academy, National Science Foundation). He has conducted missions under contract for agencies such as the Swedish Ministry of Justice, the Swedish Government, and Human Rights First. He was appointed visiting Professor at the Scottish Institute for Policing Research (2009-2010), and he is currently visiting Professor at the Norwegian Police University College. In January 2010 he was given an award from the International Academy of Investigative Psychology for “outstanding contributions to Investigative Psychology”. He has been invited to 15+ countries worldwide to present his research to academics and practitioners, among them the U.K (incl MI5), Germany, China, Japan, Russia, Canada and the U.S. (including FBI’s High Value Detainee Interrogation Group (HIG), LAPD and NYPD). He has conducted work for the U.S. Innocence Project and several mission for the UN (e.g., for UNHCR and UNICRI). His research findings have been acknowledged in international media such as Der Spiegel, New York Times, Newsweek, LA Times, The Guardian, Business Weekly, The Boston Globe, New Scientist, Science Daily and Wall Street Journal.
Fields of expertise: Science policy, technology and innovation policy