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Resolution Regarding Participation
by Psychologists in Interrogations in
Military Detention Centers
WHEREAS psychologists in the United States,
through their major professional organization, the American Psychological
Association (APA), have adopted a set of ethical principles that
includes the principle of Beneficence and Nonmalfeasance (Principle
A), which declares that psychologists should strive, in their
work, "to
do no harm" and should "seek to safeguard the welfare
and rights of those with whom they interact" and the principle
of Respect for People's Rights and Dignity (Principle E),
which declares that psychologists should "respect the dignity
and worth of all people" and explicitly recognizes that "special
safeguards may be necessary to protect the rights and welfare of
persons or communities whose vulnerabilities impair autonomous
decision making"; and
WHEREAS the United States military and Central Intelligence Agency
are widely recognized and acknowledged to have incarcerated a number
of persons in foreign detention centers without the due process
of law ordinarily afforded by international human rights treaties
and standards and to have subjected many of these detainees to
forms of interrogation banned under international law, including
some forms of torture; and
WHEREAS attention has recently been drawn to the fact that psychologists
have been involved in the interrogations of incarcerated persons
in such detention centers, and in some cases have contributed to
the development of extraordinary forms of interrogation including
torture; and
WHEREAS the American Psychological Association
adopted a resolution on August 19, 2007 that, while condemning
torture, continues to allow coercive interrogations so long as
these interrogations do not cause "significant pain or suffering" or "lasting
harm," and that continues to allow psychologists to participate
in interrogations in foreign detention centers in which internationally
recognized due process of law is not afforded, and that in continuing
to permit these violations of Principles A and E of the APA Ethical
Principles and Code of Conduct, serves to legitimize the above
mentioned violations of human rights and to undermine the moral
authority and stature of psychology as a profession, and that,
moreover, fails to recognize that decades of research in social
psychology demonstrates that situational factors, especially in
highly ideological and isolated settings, can be predicted, over
time, to undermine the resolve of well-intentioned individuals,
including psychologists, to resist institutional pressures to misuse
authority;
The Department of Psychology of Earlham College therefore resolves
that the direct or indirect participation
by psychologists in interrogations of prisoners incarcerated
in foreign detention centers that do not afford prisoners internationally
recognized due process of law is unethical; and
that the American Psychological Association
should prohibit the participation of psychologists, directly
or indirectly, in interrogations in these facilities.

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