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FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY
CPY 417
• PSYCHOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE APPLICABLE IN
LEGAL ISSUES:
• COURSE OVERVIEW – GENERAL INTRODUCTION
• PRESENTING THE COURSE TO STUDENTS
FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY
CPY 417
Forensic psychology is the intersection between
psychology and the justice system. It involves
understanding fundamental legal principles,
particularly with regard to expert witness testimony
and the specific content area of concern (e.g.,
competence to stand trial, child custody and
visitation, or workplace discrimination), as well as
relevant jurisdictional considerations (e.g., in the
United States, the definition of insanity in criminal
trials differs from state to state) in order to be able to
interact appropriately with judges, attorneys and
other legal professionals.
INCAPACITY TO STAND A TRIAL
• In criminal trials, the mental disorder defense or insanity
defense is the claim that the defendant is not responsible
for their actions during an episode of mental illness
(psychiatric illness or mental handicap). Exemption of the
insane from full criminal punishment dates back to at least
the Code of Hammurabi.[1] There are different definitions
of legal insanity, such as the M'Naghten Rules, the Durham
Rule, the American Legal Institute definition, and various
miscellaneous provisions (e.g., relating to lack of mens
rea).[2] In the criminal laws of Australia and Canada, the
terms defence of mental disorder or defence of mental
illness are used.
DEFENSES
• Idiot defense
• Impossibility defense
• Age of criminal responsibility in Australia
• Defense of infancy
• Innocent owner defense
• Innovative defense
• Mental Disorder (Insanity) Defense
• Intoxication defense
• Irresistible impulse
CRIMINAL DEFENSE
• The M'Naghten rules (pronounced, and sometimes spelled, McNaughton) were
a reaction to the acquittal in 1843 of Daniel M'Naghten on the charge of
murdering Edward Drummond, whom M'Naghten had mistaken for British Prime
Minister Robert Peel.[1]
• M'Naghten fired a pistol at the back of Peel's secretary, Edward Drummond, who
died five days later. The House of Lords asked a panel of judges, presided over by
Sir Nicolas Conyngham Tindal, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, a series of
hypothetical questions about the defence of insanity. The principles expounded
by this panel have come to be known as the M'Naghten Rules, though they have
gained any status only by usage in the common law and M'Naghten himself
would have been found guilty if they had been applied at his trial.[2][3] The rules
so formulated as M'Naghten's Case 1843 10 C & F 200[4] have been a standard
test for criminal liability in relation to mentally disordered defendants in common
law jurisdictions ever since, with some minor adjustments. When the tests set
out by the Rules are satisfied, the accused may be adjudged "not guilty by reason
of insanity" or "guilty but insane" and the sentence may be a mandatory or
discretionary (but usually indeterminate) period of treatment in a secure hospital
facility, or otherwise at the discretion of the court (depending on the country and
the offence charged) instead of a punitive disposal.
• DANIEL MCNAGHTEN RULE
THE MATRIX DEFENSE
• The Matrix defense is the term applied to several
legal cases of a defense based on the Matrix films
where reality is actually a computer generation—
simulism—and that the real world is quite
different from what reality is perceived to be.
• In using this defense, the defendant claims that he
committed a crime because he believed he was in
the Matrix, and not in the real world. This is a
version of the insanity defense and considered a
descendant of the Taxi Driver defense of John
Hinckley, one of the first defenses based on
blurring reality with the movies
MENTAL DISORDER DEFENSE
• In the criminal laws of Australia and Canada, the
defence of mental disorder (sometimes called
the defence of mental illness) is a legal defence
by excuse, by which a defendant may argue they
should not be held criminally liable for breaking
the law because they were mentally ill at the
time of the alleged criminal actions.
MISTAKE
• A mistake of fact may sometimes mean that,
while a person has committed the physical
element of an offence, because they were
labouring under a mistake of fact, they never
formed the required mens rea, and so will escape
liability for offences that require mens rea. This is
unlike a mistake of law, which is not usually a
defense; law enforcement may or may not take
for granted that individuals know what the law is.
• Because the prosecution in a criminal case must
prove the guilt of the accused beyond a
reasonable doubt, the defendant must convince
the jury that there is reasonable doubt about
whether the witness actually saw what he or she
claims to have seen, or recalls having seen.
Although scientific studies have shown that
mistaken identity is a common phenomenon,
jurors give very strong credence to eyewitness
testimony, particularly where the eyewitness is
resolute in believing that their identification of
the defendant was correct.
ABUSE DEFENSE
• The abuse defense is a criminal law defense in
which the defendant argues that a prior history of
abuse justifies violent retaliation. While the term
most often refers to instances of child abuse or
sexual assault, it also refers more generally to any
attempt by the defense to use a syndrome or
societal condition to deflect responsibility away
from the defendant. Sometimes the concept is
referred to as the abuse excuse, in particular by the
critics of the idea that guilty people may use past
victimization to diminish the responsibility for their
crimes.
ACTUAL INNOCENCE
• Actual innocence is a state of affairs in which
a defendant in a criminal case is innocent of
the charges against them because he or she
did not in fact commit the crime of which they
have been accused.
ALIBI (DISAMBIGUATION)
• An alibi is a form of defense used in criminal
procedure wherein the accused attempts to
prove that he or she was in some other place at
the time the alleged offense was committed.
The Criminal Law Deskbook of Criminal
Procedure[1] states: "Alibi is different from all of
the other defenses; it is based upon the
premise that the defendant is truly innocent." In
the Latin language alibī means "somewhere
else."
AMBUSH DEFENSE
• An ambush defence is one in which defence evidence -
notably from expert witnesses - has not been adduced
in advance to the prosecuting authorities, leading to
their inability to rebut it. The term is used in United
Kingdom jurisprudence. Since 1987, the possibility of
the ambush defence has been much reduced by The
Crown Court (Advance Notice of Expert Evidence) Rules
1987, made under section 81 of the Police and Criminal
Evidence Act 1984, which in essence require the
defence to provide the prosecution with copies of
expert witness reports in sufficient time for the
prosecution to consider the nature of and if necessary
prepare rebuttal evidence opposing the report.
AUTOMATISM
• Automatism is a rarely used criminal defence which
denies that the accused was criminally responsible for
his or her actions. There are several limitations to the
defence of automatism in English law. Prior fault
generally excludes automatism. Intoxication generally
excludes automatism, even when involuntary. Any
defence that rests on insanity comes under the
M'Naghten Rules. Under English law internal causes of
automatism are generally judged to be insane
automatism and so result in the special verdict ('not
guilty by reason of insanity') rather than simple
acquittal.
AUTOMATISM LAW
• Automatism is a rarely used criminal defence. It is one of the mental
condition defences that relate to the mental state of the defendant.
Automatism can be seen variously as lack of voluntariness, lack of
culpability (unconsciousness) or excuse (Schopp). Automatism means
that the defendant was not aware of his or her actions when making the
particular movements that constituted the illegal act. For example,
Esther Griggs in 1858 threw her child out of a first floor window
believing that the house was on fire, whilst having a night terror.[1] Brian
Thomas strangled his wife in their campervan in a more recent case in
Aberporth in an episode of rapid eye movement sleep behaviour
disorder (a disorder related to sleepwalking), where he dreamed there
was an intruder on top of his wife. The defence of automatism is
denying that the person was acting in the sense that the criminal law
demands. As such it is really a denial-of-proof – the defendant is
asserting that the offence is not made out. The prosecution does not
have to disprove the defence as is sometimes erroneously reported; the
prosecution has to prove all the elements of the offence including the
voluntary act requirement. Automatism is a defence even against strict
liability crimes like dangerous driving, where no intent is necessary.
DIMINISHED RESPONSIBILITY
• In criminal law, diminished responsibility (or
diminished capacity) is a potential defense by
excuse by which defendants argue that although
they broke the law, they should not be held fully
criminally liable for doing so, as their mental
functions were "diminished" or impaired. The
defense's acceptance in American jurisdictions
varies considerably. The majority of states have
adopted it by statute or case decision, and a
minority even recognise broader defenses such as
'irresistible impulse'.
DURESS
• In jurisprudence, duress or coercion refers to a
situation whereby a person performs an act as a
result of violence, threat or other pressure against
the person. Black's Law Dictionary (6th ed.) defines
duress as "any unlawful threat or coercion used... to
induce another to act [or not act] in a manner [they]
otherwise would not [or would]". Duress is pressure
exerted upon a person to coerce that person to
perform an act that he or she ordinarily would not
perform. The notion of duress must be distinguished
both from undue influence in the civil law and from
necessity.
IDIOT DEFENSE
• The idiot defense is a satirical term for a legal strategy where a
defendant claims innocence by virtue of having been ignorant
of facts of which the defendant would normally be expected to
be aware. Other terms used for this tactic include "dumb CEO
defense," "dummy defense," "ostrich defense," and "Sergeant
Schultz defense."
• The term was popularized as a result of a number of high-
profile corporate accounting scandal defendants claiming that
all wrongdoing was performed by others, without the
defendant's knowledge or consent. Attorneys for these
defendants claimed that their skill was in valuation and deal-
making, and that they lacked the training to recognize
fraudulent accounting practices they claimed that they would
have needed. However, in many cases the defendants'
subordinates testified that the defendants ordered them to
falsify the accounts.
IMPOSSIBILITY DEFENSE
• An Impossibility defense is a criminal defense
occasionally used when a defendant is accused of
a criminal attempt that failed only because the
crime was factually or legally impossible to
commit. Factual impossibility is rarely an adequate
defense at common law. In the United States,
thirty-seven states have ruled out factual
impossibility as a defense to the crime of attempt.
This is not to be confused with a 'mistake of fact'
defense, which may be a defense to a specific
intent crime like larceny.
CRIMINAL AGE
• The age of criminal responsibility in Australia is
the age below which a child is deemed incapable
of having committed a criminal offence. In legal
terms, it is referred to as a defense of infancy.
• WHICH IS THE CRIMINAL AGE IN KENYA? 14-18
JUVENILE / 18 AND ABOVE ADULT CRIMINAL
JUSTICE
DEFENSE OF INFANCY
• The defense of infancy is a form of defense
known as an excuse so that defendants falling
within the definition of an "infant" are
excluded from criminal liability for their
actions, if at the relevant time, they had not
reached an age of criminal responsibility.
After reaching the initial age, there may be
levels of responsibility dictated by age and the
type of offense committed.
INNOCENT OWNER DEFENSE
• An innocent owner defense is a concept in United
States law providing for an affirmative defense that
applies when an owner claims that they are
innocent of a crime and therefore their property
should not be forfeited. It is defined in section
983(d) of title 18 of the United States Code (18
U.S.C. § 983(d)) and is part of the Code that defines
forfeiture laws and more specifically the general
rules for civil forfeiture proceedings. It states that
the "claimant shall have the burden of proving that
the claimant is an innocent owner by a
preponderance of the evidence".
MENTAL DISORDER / INSANITY
DEFENSE
• In criminal trials, the mental disorder defense or
insanity defense is the claim that the defendant is
not responsible for their actions during an episode of
mental illness (psychiatric illness or mental
handicap). Exemption of the insane from full criminal
punishment dates back to at least the Code of
Hammurabi.[1] There are different definitions of legal
insanity, such as the M'Naghten Rules, the Durham
Rule, the American Legal Institute definition, and
various miscellaneous provisions (e.g., relating to
lack of mens rea).[2] In the criminal laws of Australia
and Canada, the terms defence of mental disorder
or defence of mental illness are used.
INTOXICATION DEFENSE
• In criminal law, the intoxication defense is a defense by which a
defendant may claim diminished responsibility on the basis of
substance intoxication. Although general intent crimes do not
require an intent to break the law, just an unlawful act (actus
reus) and an intent to act in such a fashion,[1] specific intent
crimes, such as residential burglary, require a certain mental
state (mens rea) to break the law,[1] and those under the
influence of an intoxicating substance may be considered to have
reduced liability for their actions. Even "voluntary intoxication"
(the knowing and voluntary consumption of alcohol or other
drugs) can be used as a defense to a "specific intent" crime,
whereas only "involuntary intoxication" ("My drink was spiked!")
can be used as a defense to a general intent crime. As for
punishment, intoxication may be a mitigating factor that
decreases a prison or jail sentence.
IRRESISTABLE IMPULSE
• In criminal law, irresistible impulse is a defense
by excuse, in this case some sort of insanity, in
which the defendant argues that they should not
be held criminally liable for their actions that
broke the law, because they could not control
those actions.
• In 1994, Lorena Bobbitt was found not guilty
when her defense argued that an irresistible
impulse led her to cut off her husband's penis.
JUSTIFIABLE HOMICIDE
• The concept of justifiable homicide in criminal law stands
on the dividing line between an excuse, a justification, and
an exculpation. In certain circumstances, homicide is
justified when it prevents greater harm to innocents. A
homicide can only be justified if there is sufficient
evidence to prove that it was reasonable to believe that
the offending party posed an imminent threat to the life or
well-being of another, in self-defense. To rule a justifiable
homicide, one must objectively prove to a trier of fact,
beyond all reasonable doubt, that the victim intended to
commit violence. A homicide in this instance is
blameless[1] and distinct from the less stringent criteria
authorizing deadly force in stand your ground rulings.
FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGIST
• An important aspect of forensic psychology is the ability to
testify in court as an expert witness, reformulating
psychological findings into the legal language of the
courtroom, providing information to legal personnel in a
way that can be understood. Further, in order to be a
credible witness the forensic psychologist must understand
the philosophy, rules, and standards of the judicial system.
Primary is an understanding of the adversarial system.
There are also rules about hearsay evidence and most
importantly, the exclusionary rule. Lack of a firm grasp of
these procedures will result in the forensic psychologist
losing credibility in the courtroom. A forensic psychologist
can be trained in clinical, social, organizational or any other
branch of psychology.
• An important aspect of forensic psychology is the
ability to testify in court as an expert witness,
reformulating psychological findings into the legal
language of the courtroom, providing information to
legal personnel in a way that can be understood.[1]
Further, in order to be a credible witness the forensic
psychologist must understand the philosophy, rules,
and standards of the judicial system. Primary is an
understanding of the adversarial system. There are
also rules about hearsay evidence and most
importantly, the exclusionary rule. Lack of a firm
grasp of these procedures will result in the forensic
psychologist losing credibility in the courtroom.[2] A
forensic psychologist can be trained in clinical, social,
organizational or any other branch of psychology.
MISTAKE OF LAW
• Mistake of law is a legal principle referring to one
or more errors that were made by a person in
understanding how the applicable law applied to
their past activity that is under analysis by a court.
In jurisdictions that use the term, it is differentiated
from mistake of fact.
• There is a principle of law that "ignorance of the
law is no excuse". In criminal cases, a mistake of law
is not a recognized defense, though such a mistake
may in very rare instances fall under the legal
category of "exculpation". In criminal cases a
mistake of fact is normally called simply, "mistake".
MISTAKEN IDENTITY
• Mistaken identity is a defense in criminal law
which claims the actual innocence of the criminal
defendant, and attempts to undermine evidence of
guilt by asserting that any eyewitness to the crime
incorrectly thought that they saw the defendant,
when in fact the person seen by the witness was
someone else. The defendant may question both
the memory of the witness (suggesting, for
example, that the identification is the result of a
false memory), and the perception of the witness
(suggesting, for example, that the witness had poor
eyesight, or that the crime occurred in a poorly lit
place).
LAWYER
• A lawyer is a person who practices law, as a
barrister, judge, attorney, counsel (counselor at
law) or solicitor or a legal academic. Working as a
lawyer involves the practical application of
abstract legal theories and knowledge to solve
specific individualized problems, or to advance the
interests of those who hire lawyers to perform
legal services.
DISTINCTION BETWEEN A LAWYER &
AN EXPERT WITNESS
• LAWYER = TRAINED IN LAW AND LEGAL ISSUES
• CAN DEFEND A CLIENT IN COURT / CAN MAKE
REFERENCE TO LEGAL PROVISIONS IN DEFENCE/
LITIGATES/ CHALLENGES THE ADVERSARY/
PLEADS/ SWEARS IN AFFIDAVIT/ HAS LEGAL
PROFESSION AND IS AUTHORISED TO DEFEND A
CLIENT/CAN GIVE LEGAL ADVICE/IS PAID BY THE
CLIENT
• FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGIST= IS CALLED IN COURT TO
GIVE A SCIENTIFIC ACCOUNT OF THE CRIME/ USES
LABORATORY, INTERVIEWS, COUNSELLING/
EMPIRICAL TESTS. SCIENTIFIC METHODS AS PROOF
OF HIS JUDGMENTS/ CANNOT DEFEND A CLIENT IN
COURT/ CANNOT GIVE HIS OPINION/ CAN USE
HEARSAY AS EVIDENCE IN HIS TESTIMONY/ IS
REFERRED TO AS EXPERT WITNESS/ CAN MAKE
REPORT FOR ANY OF THE PARTIES OR FOR THE
COURT/ STICKS TO PROFESSION AND SCIENTIFIC
PROOF/ CAN BE CROSS EXAMINED IN
COURT/MUST BE QUALIFIED IN HIS OR HER FIELD/
IS PAID BY THE CLIENT OR BY COURT FOR THE
WORK DONE/ASSESSES & EVALUATES.
FORENSIC PSYCHIATRIST
• IS A MEDICAL EXPERT IN MENTAL HEALTH
• A FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGIST AND
PSYCHIATRIST ARE DIFFERENT PROFESSIONS
• PSYCHOLOGIST DEALS WITH PSYCHOLOGICAL
PROBLEMS AND ISSUES
• PSYCHIATRIST DEALS WITH DISEASES/
MEDICINE/ OR MENTAL HEALTH IN GENERAL
EXPERT WITNESS
• Unlike fact witnesses, who are limited to testifying about
what they know or have observed, expert witnesses have the
ability to express opinion because, as their name suggests,
they are presumed to be "experts" in a certain topic. They
possess specialized knowledge about the topic. Expert
witnesses are called upon to testify on matters of mental
health (clinical expertise) or other areas of expertise such as
social, experimental, cognitive, or developmental.[8] The role
of being an expert witness is not primary and it is usually
performed in conjunction with another role such as that of
researcher, academic, evaluator, or clinical psychologist.
Clinical forensic psychologists evaluate a defendant and are
then called upon as expert witnesses to testify on the mental
state of the defendant.[7]
• In the past, expert witnesses primarily served the court rather
than the litigants
TREATMENT PROVIDER
• Treatment providers are forensic psychologists who administer
psychological intervention or treatment to individuals in both criminal and
civil cases who require or request these services. In criminal proceedings,
treatment providers may be asked to provide psychological interventions
to individuals who require treatment for the restoration of competency,
after having been determined by the courts as incompetent to stand
trial.[7] They may be asked to provide treatment for the mental illness of
those deemed insane at the crime.[7] They may also be called to administer
treatment to minimize the likelihood of future acts of violence for
individuals who are at a high risk of committing a violent offense.[7] As for
civil proceedings, treatment providers may have to treat families going
through divorce and/or custody cases. They may also provide treatment to
individuals who have suffered psychological injuries due to some kind of
trauma.[7] Treatment providers and evaluators work in the same types of
settings: forensic and state psychiatric hospitals, mental health centers,
and private practice. Not surprisingly, their work may greatly overlap. And
although not ethically encouraged, the same forensic psychologist may
take on both the role of treatment provider and evaluator for the same
client
FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGIST PRACTICE
• Forensic psychology practice 3.1 Malingering
• 3.2 Competency evaluations
• 3.3 Sanity evaluations
• 3.4 Other evaluations
• 3.5 Ethical implications
ASSESSMENTS & EVALUATIONS
• MALINGERING: An important and pressing
question in any type of forensic assessment is
the issue of malingering and deception. In
some criminal cases, the court views
malingering or feigning illness as obstruction
of justice and sentences the defendant
accordingly
• COMPETENCY EVALUATIONS: If there is a question of the
accused's competency to stand trial, a forensic
psychologist is appointed by the court to examine and
assess the individual. The individual may be in custody or
may have been released on bail. Based on the forensic
assessment, a recommendation is made to the court
whether or not the defendant is competent to proceed to
trial. If the defendant is considered incompetent to
proceed, the report or testimony will include
recommendations for the interim period during which an
attempt at restoring the individual's competency to
understand the court and legal proceedings, as well as
participate appropriately in their defense will be made.
Often, this is an issue of committed, on the advice of a
forensic psychologist, to a psychiatric treatment facility
until such time as the individual is deemed competent
SANITY EVALUATION
• The forensic psychologist may also be appointed
by the court to evaluate the defendant's state of
mind at the time of the offense. These are
defendants who the judge, prosecutor or public
defender believe, through personal interaction
with the defendant or through reading the police
report, may have been significantly impaired at
the time of the offense.
OTHER EVALUATION
• Forensic psychologists are frequently asked to make an
assessment of an individual's dangerousness or risk of re-
offending. They may provide information and
recommendations necessary for sentencing purposes, grants
of probation, and the formulation of conditions of parole,
which often involves an assessment of the offender's ability
to be rehabilitated. They are also asked questions of witness
credibility and malingering.Occasionally, they may also
provide criminal profiles to law enforcement.
• Due to the Supreme Court decision upholding involuntary
commitment laws for predatory sex offenders in Kansas v.
Hendricks, it is likely that forensic psychologists will become
involved in making recommendations in individual cases of
end-of-sentence civil commitment decisions.
IDENTIFYING A SUSPECT
• Crime is a major problem in many areas, particularly densely
populated areas. As much as we may wish for peaceful, crime-
free lives, this is most likely not going to happen anytime soon.
Punishing criminals or preventing them from committing crimes
in the first place is typically necessary for protecting ordinary
citizens from crime.
• Forensic psychology often plays a role in punishing and
preventing crimes. The word forensic is defined as "the scientific
method for investigation of crime". Forensic psychology is often
described as the merger of law and psychology.
• This field of psychology is often focused on the criminals
themselves. Professionals in this field are often given the
ominous responsibilities of trying to figure out why certain types
of people commit crimes; what type of person committed a
crime; and how to prevent people from committing crimes.
PSYCHOLOGIST IN COURTROOM
Jenkins v. United States
• In a trial for housebreaking, assault and intent to rape, a defendant
presented the testimony of three clinical psychologists in support
of an insanity defense. All three psychologists testified, based on
their personal contact with the defendant, review of his case
history and standard psychological tests, that on the date the
alleged crimes were committed, defendant had been suffering
from schizophrenia. One of the three testified that he could give
no opinion concerning the relationship between the illness and
the crimes but the other two gave opinions that the two were
related and that the crimes were the product of the illness. At the
conclusion of the trial, the judge instructed the jury to disregard
the opinions of the psychologists in that psychologists were not
qualified to give expert testimony on the issue of mental disease.
On appeal, the D.C. Circuit reversed and remanded, and held that
psychologists were qualified as expert witnesses on the question
of mental disease. (IN 1962)
APA’S POSITION
• APA submitted an amicus brief arguing that: (1)
psychology is an established science; (2) the
practice of psychology is a learned profession; (3)
a clinical psychologist is competent to express
professional opinions concerning the existence or
non-existence of mental disease or defect and
their causal relationship to overt behavior; and (4)
experience is the essential legal ingredient of
competence to give an expert opinion.
THERE ARE SEVERAL BRANCHES OF
FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY
• You will complete the twelve modules listed
below. This course shall cover the first five
modules which cover the theoretical basis of
forensic psychology across a range of settings,
through all stages of the criminal justice process,
i.e. from investigation to punishment and through
care, and as applied to a broad range of crimes
and how the law handles psychology.
• Other modules are covered by other units and
lecturers with expertise.
1. PSYCHOLOGY & CRIMINAL BEHAVIOUR
• Psychology and Criminal Behaviour
• What is criminal behaviour?
• measurement of crime,
• who commits crime?
• theories of crime,
• alternative theories of crime.
2. PSYCHOLOGY IN THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE
• Psychology in the Criminal Justice System
• Eyewitness testimony,
• children and vulnerable witnesses/suspects,
• legal decision making,
• confessions and identification,
• recovered memory.
3. TREATMENT OF OFFENDERS & VICTIMS
• Treatment of Offenders and Victims
• Theory of criminal and civil justice responses to
crime,
• what works when rehabilitating offenders?
• prison, secure units and therapeutic
communities,
• restorative justice,
• responses to juvenile and female offenders,
• victim issues.
4. APPLIED POLICE PSYCHOLOGY
• Applied Police Psychology
• Psychology and policing
• crime analysis,
• offender profiling,
• geographic profiling
• psychological autopsy
• hostage and crisis negotiation.
5. VIOLENT & SEXUAL CRIME
• Violent and Sexual Crime
• Theories of violent and sexual crime,
• child sexual abuse and rape,
• domestic violence,
• homicide,
• stalking,
• terrorism.
6. RISK ASSESSMENT AND MANAGEMENT
OF OFFENDERS
• Risk Assessment and Management of Offenders
• Assessment of risk and protective factors,
• forensic risk assessment approaches
• risk assessment methods and tools
• risk management strategies
• linking of risk assessment and risk management.
7. PRACTICE & APPLICATION IN FORENSIC
PSYCHOLOGY
• Practice and Application in Forensic Psychology
• Report writing and presentation skills,
• other practitioner skills,
• consultancy and project management,
• ethical codes of conduct,
• legal and social considerations,
• other practice based issues.
9. ADVANCED QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
METHODS
• Advanced Qualitative Research Methods
• The quantitative-qualitative debate,
• thematic analysis,
• interpretive phenomenological analysis,
• discourse analysis.
8. ADVANCED QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH
METHODS
• Advanced Quantitative Research Methods
• Review of basic research methods and SPSS,
• experimental (and quasi) designs,
• psychometric techniques, questionnaire designs
and scaling,
• ANOVA, MANOVA, multiple regression, SEM and
path analysis
STUDY SKILL
• Study Skills, Project Planning and Ethics
• Academic essay writing,
• Academic dishonesty and plagiarism,
• Referencing,
• Research design and ethics,
• Reflective practice.
DISSERTATION
• Dissertation
• Empirical work on a forensic psychology topic,
• production of literature review and empirical
research papers in format suitable for journal
article publication.
END OF INTRODUCTION
• NOW WE SHALL SWITCH TO OUR TOPIC.

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forensic_psychology (1).ppt

  • 1. FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY CPY 417 • PSYCHOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE APPLICABLE IN LEGAL ISSUES: • COURSE OVERVIEW – GENERAL INTRODUCTION • PRESENTING THE COURSE TO STUDENTS
  • 2. FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY CPY 417 Forensic psychology is the intersection between psychology and the justice system. It involves understanding fundamental legal principles, particularly with regard to expert witness testimony and the specific content area of concern (e.g., competence to stand trial, child custody and visitation, or workplace discrimination), as well as relevant jurisdictional considerations (e.g., in the United States, the definition of insanity in criminal trials differs from state to state) in order to be able to interact appropriately with judges, attorneys and other legal professionals.
  • 3. INCAPACITY TO STAND A TRIAL • In criminal trials, the mental disorder defense or insanity defense is the claim that the defendant is not responsible for their actions during an episode of mental illness (psychiatric illness or mental handicap). Exemption of the insane from full criminal punishment dates back to at least the Code of Hammurabi.[1] There are different definitions of legal insanity, such as the M'Naghten Rules, the Durham Rule, the American Legal Institute definition, and various miscellaneous provisions (e.g., relating to lack of mens rea).[2] In the criminal laws of Australia and Canada, the terms defence of mental disorder or defence of mental illness are used.
  • 4. DEFENSES • Idiot defense • Impossibility defense • Age of criminal responsibility in Australia • Defense of infancy • Innocent owner defense • Innovative defense • Mental Disorder (Insanity) Defense • Intoxication defense • Irresistible impulse
  • 5. CRIMINAL DEFENSE • The M'Naghten rules (pronounced, and sometimes spelled, McNaughton) were a reaction to the acquittal in 1843 of Daniel M'Naghten on the charge of murdering Edward Drummond, whom M'Naghten had mistaken for British Prime Minister Robert Peel.[1] • M'Naghten fired a pistol at the back of Peel's secretary, Edward Drummond, who died five days later. The House of Lords asked a panel of judges, presided over by Sir Nicolas Conyngham Tindal, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, a series of hypothetical questions about the defence of insanity. The principles expounded by this panel have come to be known as the M'Naghten Rules, though they have gained any status only by usage in the common law and M'Naghten himself would have been found guilty if they had been applied at his trial.[2][3] The rules so formulated as M'Naghten's Case 1843 10 C & F 200[4] have been a standard test for criminal liability in relation to mentally disordered defendants in common law jurisdictions ever since, with some minor adjustments. When the tests set out by the Rules are satisfied, the accused may be adjudged "not guilty by reason of insanity" or "guilty but insane" and the sentence may be a mandatory or discretionary (but usually indeterminate) period of treatment in a secure hospital facility, or otherwise at the discretion of the court (depending on the country and the offence charged) instead of a punitive disposal. • DANIEL MCNAGHTEN RULE
  • 6. THE MATRIX DEFENSE • The Matrix defense is the term applied to several legal cases of a defense based on the Matrix films where reality is actually a computer generation— simulism—and that the real world is quite different from what reality is perceived to be. • In using this defense, the defendant claims that he committed a crime because he believed he was in the Matrix, and not in the real world. This is a version of the insanity defense and considered a descendant of the Taxi Driver defense of John Hinckley, one of the first defenses based on blurring reality with the movies
  • 7. MENTAL DISORDER DEFENSE • In the criminal laws of Australia and Canada, the defence of mental disorder (sometimes called the defence of mental illness) is a legal defence by excuse, by which a defendant may argue they should not be held criminally liable for breaking the law because they were mentally ill at the time of the alleged criminal actions.
  • 8. MISTAKE • A mistake of fact may sometimes mean that, while a person has committed the physical element of an offence, because they were labouring under a mistake of fact, they never formed the required mens rea, and so will escape liability for offences that require mens rea. This is unlike a mistake of law, which is not usually a defense; law enforcement may or may not take for granted that individuals know what the law is.
  • 9. • Because the prosecution in a criminal case must prove the guilt of the accused beyond a reasonable doubt, the defendant must convince the jury that there is reasonable doubt about whether the witness actually saw what he or she claims to have seen, or recalls having seen. Although scientific studies have shown that mistaken identity is a common phenomenon, jurors give very strong credence to eyewitness testimony, particularly where the eyewitness is resolute in believing that their identification of the defendant was correct.
  • 10. ABUSE DEFENSE • The abuse defense is a criminal law defense in which the defendant argues that a prior history of abuse justifies violent retaliation. While the term most often refers to instances of child abuse or sexual assault, it also refers more generally to any attempt by the defense to use a syndrome or societal condition to deflect responsibility away from the defendant. Sometimes the concept is referred to as the abuse excuse, in particular by the critics of the idea that guilty people may use past victimization to diminish the responsibility for their crimes.
  • 11. ACTUAL INNOCENCE • Actual innocence is a state of affairs in which a defendant in a criminal case is innocent of the charges against them because he or she did not in fact commit the crime of which they have been accused.
  • 12. ALIBI (DISAMBIGUATION) • An alibi is a form of defense used in criminal procedure wherein the accused attempts to prove that he or she was in some other place at the time the alleged offense was committed. The Criminal Law Deskbook of Criminal Procedure[1] states: "Alibi is different from all of the other defenses; it is based upon the premise that the defendant is truly innocent." In the Latin language alibī means "somewhere else."
  • 13. AMBUSH DEFENSE • An ambush defence is one in which defence evidence - notably from expert witnesses - has not been adduced in advance to the prosecuting authorities, leading to their inability to rebut it. The term is used in United Kingdom jurisprudence. Since 1987, the possibility of the ambush defence has been much reduced by The Crown Court (Advance Notice of Expert Evidence) Rules 1987, made under section 81 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984, which in essence require the defence to provide the prosecution with copies of expert witness reports in sufficient time for the prosecution to consider the nature of and if necessary prepare rebuttal evidence opposing the report.
  • 14. AUTOMATISM • Automatism is a rarely used criminal defence which denies that the accused was criminally responsible for his or her actions. There are several limitations to the defence of automatism in English law. Prior fault generally excludes automatism. Intoxication generally excludes automatism, even when involuntary. Any defence that rests on insanity comes under the M'Naghten Rules. Under English law internal causes of automatism are generally judged to be insane automatism and so result in the special verdict ('not guilty by reason of insanity') rather than simple acquittal.
  • 15. AUTOMATISM LAW • Automatism is a rarely used criminal defence. It is one of the mental condition defences that relate to the mental state of the defendant. Automatism can be seen variously as lack of voluntariness, lack of culpability (unconsciousness) or excuse (Schopp). Automatism means that the defendant was not aware of his or her actions when making the particular movements that constituted the illegal act. For example, Esther Griggs in 1858 threw her child out of a first floor window believing that the house was on fire, whilst having a night terror.[1] Brian Thomas strangled his wife in their campervan in a more recent case in Aberporth in an episode of rapid eye movement sleep behaviour disorder (a disorder related to sleepwalking), where he dreamed there was an intruder on top of his wife. The defence of automatism is denying that the person was acting in the sense that the criminal law demands. As such it is really a denial-of-proof – the defendant is asserting that the offence is not made out. The prosecution does not have to disprove the defence as is sometimes erroneously reported; the prosecution has to prove all the elements of the offence including the voluntary act requirement. Automatism is a defence even against strict liability crimes like dangerous driving, where no intent is necessary.
  • 16. DIMINISHED RESPONSIBILITY • In criminal law, diminished responsibility (or diminished capacity) is a potential defense by excuse by which defendants argue that although they broke the law, they should not be held fully criminally liable for doing so, as their mental functions were "diminished" or impaired. The defense's acceptance in American jurisdictions varies considerably. The majority of states have adopted it by statute or case decision, and a minority even recognise broader defenses such as 'irresistible impulse'.
  • 17. DURESS • In jurisprudence, duress or coercion refers to a situation whereby a person performs an act as a result of violence, threat or other pressure against the person. Black's Law Dictionary (6th ed.) defines duress as "any unlawful threat or coercion used... to induce another to act [or not act] in a manner [they] otherwise would not [or would]". Duress is pressure exerted upon a person to coerce that person to perform an act that he or she ordinarily would not perform. The notion of duress must be distinguished both from undue influence in the civil law and from necessity.
  • 18. IDIOT DEFENSE • The idiot defense is a satirical term for a legal strategy where a defendant claims innocence by virtue of having been ignorant of facts of which the defendant would normally be expected to be aware. Other terms used for this tactic include "dumb CEO defense," "dummy defense," "ostrich defense," and "Sergeant Schultz defense." • The term was popularized as a result of a number of high- profile corporate accounting scandal defendants claiming that all wrongdoing was performed by others, without the defendant's knowledge or consent. Attorneys for these defendants claimed that their skill was in valuation and deal- making, and that they lacked the training to recognize fraudulent accounting practices they claimed that they would have needed. However, in many cases the defendants' subordinates testified that the defendants ordered them to falsify the accounts.
  • 19. IMPOSSIBILITY DEFENSE • An Impossibility defense is a criminal defense occasionally used when a defendant is accused of a criminal attempt that failed only because the crime was factually or legally impossible to commit. Factual impossibility is rarely an adequate defense at common law. In the United States, thirty-seven states have ruled out factual impossibility as a defense to the crime of attempt. This is not to be confused with a 'mistake of fact' defense, which may be a defense to a specific intent crime like larceny.
  • 20. CRIMINAL AGE • The age of criminal responsibility in Australia is the age below which a child is deemed incapable of having committed a criminal offence. In legal terms, it is referred to as a defense of infancy. • WHICH IS THE CRIMINAL AGE IN KENYA? 14-18 JUVENILE / 18 AND ABOVE ADULT CRIMINAL JUSTICE
  • 21. DEFENSE OF INFANCY • The defense of infancy is a form of defense known as an excuse so that defendants falling within the definition of an "infant" are excluded from criminal liability for their actions, if at the relevant time, they had not reached an age of criminal responsibility. After reaching the initial age, there may be levels of responsibility dictated by age and the type of offense committed.
  • 22. INNOCENT OWNER DEFENSE • An innocent owner defense is a concept in United States law providing for an affirmative defense that applies when an owner claims that they are innocent of a crime and therefore their property should not be forfeited. It is defined in section 983(d) of title 18 of the United States Code (18 U.S.C. § 983(d)) and is part of the Code that defines forfeiture laws and more specifically the general rules for civil forfeiture proceedings. It states that the "claimant shall have the burden of proving that the claimant is an innocent owner by a preponderance of the evidence".
  • 23. MENTAL DISORDER / INSANITY DEFENSE • In criminal trials, the mental disorder defense or insanity defense is the claim that the defendant is not responsible for their actions during an episode of mental illness (psychiatric illness or mental handicap). Exemption of the insane from full criminal punishment dates back to at least the Code of Hammurabi.[1] There are different definitions of legal insanity, such as the M'Naghten Rules, the Durham Rule, the American Legal Institute definition, and various miscellaneous provisions (e.g., relating to lack of mens rea).[2] In the criminal laws of Australia and Canada, the terms defence of mental disorder or defence of mental illness are used.
  • 24. INTOXICATION DEFENSE • In criminal law, the intoxication defense is a defense by which a defendant may claim diminished responsibility on the basis of substance intoxication. Although general intent crimes do not require an intent to break the law, just an unlawful act (actus reus) and an intent to act in such a fashion,[1] specific intent crimes, such as residential burglary, require a certain mental state (mens rea) to break the law,[1] and those under the influence of an intoxicating substance may be considered to have reduced liability for their actions. Even "voluntary intoxication" (the knowing and voluntary consumption of alcohol or other drugs) can be used as a defense to a "specific intent" crime, whereas only "involuntary intoxication" ("My drink was spiked!") can be used as a defense to a general intent crime. As for punishment, intoxication may be a mitigating factor that decreases a prison or jail sentence.
  • 25. IRRESISTABLE IMPULSE • In criminal law, irresistible impulse is a defense by excuse, in this case some sort of insanity, in which the defendant argues that they should not be held criminally liable for their actions that broke the law, because they could not control those actions. • In 1994, Lorena Bobbitt was found not guilty when her defense argued that an irresistible impulse led her to cut off her husband's penis.
  • 26. JUSTIFIABLE HOMICIDE • The concept of justifiable homicide in criminal law stands on the dividing line between an excuse, a justification, and an exculpation. In certain circumstances, homicide is justified when it prevents greater harm to innocents. A homicide can only be justified if there is sufficient evidence to prove that it was reasonable to believe that the offending party posed an imminent threat to the life or well-being of another, in self-defense. To rule a justifiable homicide, one must objectively prove to a trier of fact, beyond all reasonable doubt, that the victim intended to commit violence. A homicide in this instance is blameless[1] and distinct from the less stringent criteria authorizing deadly force in stand your ground rulings.
  • 27. FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGIST • An important aspect of forensic psychology is the ability to testify in court as an expert witness, reformulating psychological findings into the legal language of the courtroom, providing information to legal personnel in a way that can be understood. Further, in order to be a credible witness the forensic psychologist must understand the philosophy, rules, and standards of the judicial system. Primary is an understanding of the adversarial system. There are also rules about hearsay evidence and most importantly, the exclusionary rule. Lack of a firm grasp of these procedures will result in the forensic psychologist losing credibility in the courtroom. A forensic psychologist can be trained in clinical, social, organizational or any other branch of psychology.
  • 28. • An important aspect of forensic psychology is the ability to testify in court as an expert witness, reformulating psychological findings into the legal language of the courtroom, providing information to legal personnel in a way that can be understood.[1] Further, in order to be a credible witness the forensic psychologist must understand the philosophy, rules, and standards of the judicial system. Primary is an understanding of the adversarial system. There are also rules about hearsay evidence and most importantly, the exclusionary rule. Lack of a firm grasp of these procedures will result in the forensic psychologist losing credibility in the courtroom.[2] A forensic psychologist can be trained in clinical, social, organizational or any other branch of psychology.
  • 29. MISTAKE OF LAW • Mistake of law is a legal principle referring to one or more errors that were made by a person in understanding how the applicable law applied to their past activity that is under analysis by a court. In jurisdictions that use the term, it is differentiated from mistake of fact. • There is a principle of law that "ignorance of the law is no excuse". In criminal cases, a mistake of law is not a recognized defense, though such a mistake may in very rare instances fall under the legal category of "exculpation". In criminal cases a mistake of fact is normally called simply, "mistake".
  • 30. MISTAKEN IDENTITY • Mistaken identity is a defense in criminal law which claims the actual innocence of the criminal defendant, and attempts to undermine evidence of guilt by asserting that any eyewitness to the crime incorrectly thought that they saw the defendant, when in fact the person seen by the witness was someone else. The defendant may question both the memory of the witness (suggesting, for example, that the identification is the result of a false memory), and the perception of the witness (suggesting, for example, that the witness had poor eyesight, or that the crime occurred in a poorly lit place).
  • 31. LAWYER • A lawyer is a person who practices law, as a barrister, judge, attorney, counsel (counselor at law) or solicitor or a legal academic. Working as a lawyer involves the practical application of abstract legal theories and knowledge to solve specific individualized problems, or to advance the interests of those who hire lawyers to perform legal services.
  • 32.
  • 33. DISTINCTION BETWEEN A LAWYER & AN EXPERT WITNESS • LAWYER = TRAINED IN LAW AND LEGAL ISSUES • CAN DEFEND A CLIENT IN COURT / CAN MAKE REFERENCE TO LEGAL PROVISIONS IN DEFENCE/ LITIGATES/ CHALLENGES THE ADVERSARY/ PLEADS/ SWEARS IN AFFIDAVIT/ HAS LEGAL PROFESSION AND IS AUTHORISED TO DEFEND A CLIENT/CAN GIVE LEGAL ADVICE/IS PAID BY THE CLIENT
  • 34. • FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGIST= IS CALLED IN COURT TO GIVE A SCIENTIFIC ACCOUNT OF THE CRIME/ USES LABORATORY, INTERVIEWS, COUNSELLING/ EMPIRICAL TESTS. SCIENTIFIC METHODS AS PROOF OF HIS JUDGMENTS/ CANNOT DEFEND A CLIENT IN COURT/ CANNOT GIVE HIS OPINION/ CAN USE HEARSAY AS EVIDENCE IN HIS TESTIMONY/ IS REFERRED TO AS EXPERT WITNESS/ CAN MAKE REPORT FOR ANY OF THE PARTIES OR FOR THE COURT/ STICKS TO PROFESSION AND SCIENTIFIC PROOF/ CAN BE CROSS EXAMINED IN COURT/MUST BE QUALIFIED IN HIS OR HER FIELD/ IS PAID BY THE CLIENT OR BY COURT FOR THE WORK DONE/ASSESSES & EVALUATES.
  • 35. FORENSIC PSYCHIATRIST • IS A MEDICAL EXPERT IN MENTAL HEALTH • A FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGIST AND PSYCHIATRIST ARE DIFFERENT PROFESSIONS • PSYCHOLOGIST DEALS WITH PSYCHOLOGICAL PROBLEMS AND ISSUES • PSYCHIATRIST DEALS WITH DISEASES/ MEDICINE/ OR MENTAL HEALTH IN GENERAL
  • 36. EXPERT WITNESS • Unlike fact witnesses, who are limited to testifying about what they know or have observed, expert witnesses have the ability to express opinion because, as their name suggests, they are presumed to be "experts" in a certain topic. They possess specialized knowledge about the topic. Expert witnesses are called upon to testify on matters of mental health (clinical expertise) or other areas of expertise such as social, experimental, cognitive, or developmental.[8] The role of being an expert witness is not primary and it is usually performed in conjunction with another role such as that of researcher, academic, evaluator, or clinical psychologist. Clinical forensic psychologists evaluate a defendant and are then called upon as expert witnesses to testify on the mental state of the defendant.[7] • In the past, expert witnesses primarily served the court rather than the litigants
  • 37. TREATMENT PROVIDER • Treatment providers are forensic psychologists who administer psychological intervention or treatment to individuals in both criminal and civil cases who require or request these services. In criminal proceedings, treatment providers may be asked to provide psychological interventions to individuals who require treatment for the restoration of competency, after having been determined by the courts as incompetent to stand trial.[7] They may be asked to provide treatment for the mental illness of those deemed insane at the crime.[7] They may also be called to administer treatment to minimize the likelihood of future acts of violence for individuals who are at a high risk of committing a violent offense.[7] As for civil proceedings, treatment providers may have to treat families going through divorce and/or custody cases. They may also provide treatment to individuals who have suffered psychological injuries due to some kind of trauma.[7] Treatment providers and evaluators work in the same types of settings: forensic and state psychiatric hospitals, mental health centers, and private practice. Not surprisingly, their work may greatly overlap. And although not ethically encouraged, the same forensic psychologist may take on both the role of treatment provider and evaluator for the same client
  • 38. FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGIST PRACTICE • Forensic psychology practice 3.1 Malingering • 3.2 Competency evaluations • 3.3 Sanity evaluations • 3.4 Other evaluations • 3.5 Ethical implications
  • 39. ASSESSMENTS & EVALUATIONS • MALINGERING: An important and pressing question in any type of forensic assessment is the issue of malingering and deception. In some criminal cases, the court views malingering or feigning illness as obstruction of justice and sentences the defendant accordingly
  • 40. • COMPETENCY EVALUATIONS: If there is a question of the accused's competency to stand trial, a forensic psychologist is appointed by the court to examine and assess the individual. The individual may be in custody or may have been released on bail. Based on the forensic assessment, a recommendation is made to the court whether or not the defendant is competent to proceed to trial. If the defendant is considered incompetent to proceed, the report or testimony will include recommendations for the interim period during which an attempt at restoring the individual's competency to understand the court and legal proceedings, as well as participate appropriately in their defense will be made. Often, this is an issue of committed, on the advice of a forensic psychologist, to a psychiatric treatment facility until such time as the individual is deemed competent
  • 41. SANITY EVALUATION • The forensic psychologist may also be appointed by the court to evaluate the defendant's state of mind at the time of the offense. These are defendants who the judge, prosecutor or public defender believe, through personal interaction with the defendant or through reading the police report, may have been significantly impaired at the time of the offense.
  • 42. OTHER EVALUATION • Forensic psychologists are frequently asked to make an assessment of an individual's dangerousness or risk of re- offending. They may provide information and recommendations necessary for sentencing purposes, grants of probation, and the formulation of conditions of parole, which often involves an assessment of the offender's ability to be rehabilitated. They are also asked questions of witness credibility and malingering.Occasionally, they may also provide criminal profiles to law enforcement. • Due to the Supreme Court decision upholding involuntary commitment laws for predatory sex offenders in Kansas v. Hendricks, it is likely that forensic psychologists will become involved in making recommendations in individual cases of end-of-sentence civil commitment decisions.
  • 43. IDENTIFYING A SUSPECT • Crime is a major problem in many areas, particularly densely populated areas. As much as we may wish for peaceful, crime- free lives, this is most likely not going to happen anytime soon. Punishing criminals or preventing them from committing crimes in the first place is typically necessary for protecting ordinary citizens from crime. • Forensic psychology often plays a role in punishing and preventing crimes. The word forensic is defined as "the scientific method for investigation of crime". Forensic psychology is often described as the merger of law and psychology. • This field of psychology is often focused on the criminals themselves. Professionals in this field are often given the ominous responsibilities of trying to figure out why certain types of people commit crimes; what type of person committed a crime; and how to prevent people from committing crimes.
  • 44. PSYCHOLOGIST IN COURTROOM Jenkins v. United States • In a trial for housebreaking, assault and intent to rape, a defendant presented the testimony of three clinical psychologists in support of an insanity defense. All three psychologists testified, based on their personal contact with the defendant, review of his case history and standard psychological tests, that on the date the alleged crimes were committed, defendant had been suffering from schizophrenia. One of the three testified that he could give no opinion concerning the relationship between the illness and the crimes but the other two gave opinions that the two were related and that the crimes were the product of the illness. At the conclusion of the trial, the judge instructed the jury to disregard the opinions of the psychologists in that psychologists were not qualified to give expert testimony on the issue of mental disease. On appeal, the D.C. Circuit reversed and remanded, and held that psychologists were qualified as expert witnesses on the question of mental disease. (IN 1962)
  • 45. APA’S POSITION • APA submitted an amicus brief arguing that: (1) psychology is an established science; (2) the practice of psychology is a learned profession; (3) a clinical psychologist is competent to express professional opinions concerning the existence or non-existence of mental disease or defect and their causal relationship to overt behavior; and (4) experience is the essential legal ingredient of competence to give an expert opinion.
  • 46. THERE ARE SEVERAL BRANCHES OF FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY • You will complete the twelve modules listed below. This course shall cover the first five modules which cover the theoretical basis of forensic psychology across a range of settings, through all stages of the criminal justice process, i.e. from investigation to punishment and through care, and as applied to a broad range of crimes and how the law handles psychology. • Other modules are covered by other units and lecturers with expertise.
  • 47. 1. PSYCHOLOGY & CRIMINAL BEHAVIOUR • Psychology and Criminal Behaviour • What is criminal behaviour? • measurement of crime, • who commits crime? • theories of crime, • alternative theories of crime.
  • 48. 2. PSYCHOLOGY IN THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE • Psychology in the Criminal Justice System • Eyewitness testimony, • children and vulnerable witnesses/suspects, • legal decision making, • confessions and identification, • recovered memory.
  • 49. 3. TREATMENT OF OFFENDERS & VICTIMS • Treatment of Offenders and Victims • Theory of criminal and civil justice responses to crime, • what works when rehabilitating offenders? • prison, secure units and therapeutic communities, • restorative justice, • responses to juvenile and female offenders, • victim issues.
  • 50. 4. APPLIED POLICE PSYCHOLOGY • Applied Police Psychology • Psychology and policing • crime analysis, • offender profiling, • geographic profiling • psychological autopsy • hostage and crisis negotiation.
  • 51. 5. VIOLENT & SEXUAL CRIME • Violent and Sexual Crime • Theories of violent and sexual crime, • child sexual abuse and rape, • domestic violence, • homicide, • stalking, • terrorism.
  • 52. 6. RISK ASSESSMENT AND MANAGEMENT OF OFFENDERS • Risk Assessment and Management of Offenders • Assessment of risk and protective factors, • forensic risk assessment approaches • risk assessment methods and tools • risk management strategies • linking of risk assessment and risk management.
  • 53. 7. PRACTICE & APPLICATION IN FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY • Practice and Application in Forensic Psychology • Report writing and presentation skills, • other practitioner skills, • consultancy and project management, • ethical codes of conduct, • legal and social considerations, • other practice based issues.
  • 54. 9. ADVANCED QUALITATIVE RESEARCH METHODS • Advanced Qualitative Research Methods • The quantitative-qualitative debate, • thematic analysis, • interpretive phenomenological analysis, • discourse analysis.
  • 55. 8. ADVANCED QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH METHODS • Advanced Quantitative Research Methods • Review of basic research methods and SPSS, • experimental (and quasi) designs, • psychometric techniques, questionnaire designs and scaling, • ANOVA, MANOVA, multiple regression, SEM and path analysis
  • 56. STUDY SKILL • Study Skills, Project Planning and Ethics • Academic essay writing, • Academic dishonesty and plagiarism, • Referencing, • Research design and ethics, • Reflective practice.
  • 57. DISSERTATION • Dissertation • Empirical work on a forensic psychology topic, • production of literature review and empirical research papers in format suitable for journal article publication.
  • 58. END OF INTRODUCTION • NOW WE SHALL SWITCH TO OUR TOPIC.