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Mental Health and Crime


ISBN13: 9780415521161
Published: March 2012
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback (Hardback in 2010)
Price: £49.99
Hardback edition , ISBN13 9781904385608



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Does mental disorder cause crime? Does crime cause mental disorder? And if either of these could be proved to be true what consequences should stem for those who find themselves deemed mentally disordered offenders?

Mental Health and Crime examines the nature of the relationship between mental disorder and crime. It concludes that the broad definition of what is an all too common human condition – mental disorder – and the widespread occurrence of an equally all too common human behaviour – that of offending – would make unlikely any definitive or easy answer to such questions.

For those who offend in the context of mental disorder many aspects of the criminal justice process, and of the disposals that follow, are adapted to take account of a relationship between mental disorder and crime. But if the very relationship is questionable, is the way in which we deal with such offenders discriminatory? Or is it perhaps to their benefit to be thought of as less responsible for their offending than fully culpable offenders?

The book thus explores not only the nature of the relationship, but also the human rights and legal issues arising. It also looks at some of the permutations in the therapeutic process that can ensue when those with mental health problems are treated in the context of their offending behaviour.

Subjects:
Mental Health Law
Contents:
Introduction
1. Mental Health and Crime
2. Crime
3. Mental Disorder
4. Are Mental Disorder and Crime Related?
5. Types of Crime
6. Mental Disorder and Violence
7. Symptoms and Causality
8. Causal Mechanisms, Criminology and Mental Disorder
9. Human Rights and Mentally Disordered Offenders
10. Deprivation of Liberty
11. Mental Disorder and Detention: A Perspective from Prison
12. The Intersection between Penality and Therapeutic Detention: Indeterminate Sentences for Public Protection
13. Medical Treatment: Offenders, Patients and Their Capacity
14. Individual and Personal Consequences: The Case of Smoking
15. Impossible Paradoxes
16. Treatment, Mental Disorder, Crime, Responsibility and Punishment
17. Fitness to Plead
18. Dangerous and Severe Personality Disorder
19. Culpability and Treatment: Chasing Dragons?
20. Conclusions