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Psychological and Psychiatric Foundations of Criminal Behavior

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Title: Psychological and Psychiatric Foundations of Criminal Behavior


1
Psychological and Psychiatric Foundations of
Criminal Behavior
2
QUESTION
  • In what way would psychological theories differ
    from sociological theories?

3
EARLY PSYCHOLOGICAL THEORIES
  • Conditioned Behavior
  • plus
  • Psychopathology

4
Psychological Theories of Crime Causation
  • Fundamental Assumptions Include
  • The individual is the primary unit of analysis.
  • Personality is the major motivational element
    within individuals.
  • Crimes result from abnormal, dysfunctional, or
    inappropriate mental processes within the
    personality.
  • Normality is generally defined by social
    consensus.

5
Psychological Theories of Crime
Causation(contd)
  • Criminal behavior may be purposeful for the
    individual insofar as it addresses certain felt
    needs.
  • Defective, or abnormal, mental processes may have
    a variety of causes, i.e., a diseased mind,
    inappropriate learning or improper conditioning,
    the emulation of inappropriate role models, and
    adjustment to inner conflicts.

6
QUESTION
  • Does society have a responsibility to treat
    offenders diagnosed with a personality disorder,
    i.e., psychopathic or psychotic behavior?
  • If so, for how long?

7
FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY orPSYCHIATRIC CRIMINOLOGY
  • Forensic psychology or criminal psychology is the
    application of science and the profession of
    psychology to questions and issues relating to
    law and the legal system.
  • (Psychology vs. Psychiatry)
  • Forensic psychology is concerned with a complex
    set of drives and motives operating within the
    personality that ultimately determines behavior
    (both biological and psychological urges).
  • Key Concepts Psychopath, sociopath, antisocial
    and asocial personality.

8
Psychopathy
  • Refers to people who repeatedly
  • commit criminal acts for which they
  • feel little or no remorse.
  • Psychopaths are characteristically
  • Superficial in their interpersonal relationships.
  • Lack empathy, selfish, and irresponsible.
  • Blame others for their misfortunes and offer
    excuses for their behavior.
  • Deceitful and manipulative yet charming and
    glib at the same time.
  • Example Ted Bundy

9
  • According to recent studies,
  • the best predictor of violence and
  • recidivism, is psychopathy.
  • The concept of psychopathy has repeatedly
    demonstrated a robust relationship to the risk of
    repeat criminality and violence in offender and
    patient populations.

10
Psychopath/Sociopath
  • When we seek to explain the riddle of human
    conduct in general and antisocial behavior in
    particular, the solution must be sought in the
    personality. Abrahamsen (1944).
  • A psychopathic personality appears early in life,
  • often in the teenage years.

11
ANTISOCIAL PERSONALITY DISORDER
  • Antisocial (asocial) personality types who are
    basically unsocialized and whose behavior pattern
    brings them repeatedly into conflicts with
    society.
  • The focus is on the type of behavior exhibited
  • as opposed to the identifiable personality traits
  • of a sociopath or psychopath.

12
Characteristics of APD
  • Incapable of significant loyalty to individuals,
    groups, or social values.
  • Impulsive and irresponsible.
  • Blames others or offers plausible rationalization
    for their behavior.
  • Selfish and callous to concerns of others.
  • Unable to feel guilt or to learn from experience
    and punishment.
  • Very low tolerance to frustration and a low
    threshold for discharge of aggression, including
    violence.
  • Inflated self-appraisal, glib, and superficial
    charm.

13
PSYCHOANALYTIC PERSPECTIVE
  • The psychoanalytic perspective was developed by
    Freud and emphasizes the role of personality in
    human behavior and which sees deviant behavior as
    the result of dysfunctional personalities.
  • Significant inadequacies may result in full-blown
    mental illness, which in itself can be a direct
    cause of crime.
  • Key Concepts Personality (Id, ego, and
    superego), neurosis, psychosis, sublimation,
    Thanatos, psychosis, schizophrenia.

14
Freudian Terms
  • The id is based on the pleasure principle
    (primitive instincts).
  • The ego is based on the reality principle.
  • The superego is based on the ethical principle.
  • Sublimation is the psychological process whereby
    one item of consciousness comes to be be
    symbolically substituted for another.
  • Thanatos is based on the existence of a death
    instinct.
  • Neurosis is a minor form of mental illness which
    may also lead to crime. Neurotic individuals are
    well in touch with reality but many find
    themselves anxious, fearful of certain
    situations, or unable to help themselves in
    others (compulsive behavior).

15
The Psychotic Offender
  • Psychotic people are out of touch with reality in
    some fundamental way. They may suffer from
    hallucinations, delusions, or other breaks with
    reality.
  • Psychosis is more severe than neurosis.
  • Psychotics have also been classified as
    schizophrenic or paranoid schizophrenic.

16
Other Types of Psychological Perspectives
  • Frustration- Aggression Theory Frustration is a
    natural consequence of living and a root cause of
    crime. Aggressive behavior is a response to
    frustration.
  • Modeling Theory People learn how to behave by
    modeling themselves after others whom they have
    the opportunity to observe.
  • Behavior Theory Individual behavior which is
    rewarded will increase in frequency, while that
    which is punished will decrease.
  • Self-Control Theory The root cause of crime can
    be found in a persons inability to exercise
    socially appropriate controls over the self.

17
Predictive Schemes
  • A primary goal of psychological assessment
  • is to attempt to make predictions about
  • future behavior based on some set of factors
  • that are combined in some fashion
  • into a predictive scheme.

18
  • Prediction of future criminal conduct
  • is an essential element in many of
  • the decisions rendered throughout
  • our criminal justice system.
  • Bail
  • Punishment
  • Parole

19
Risk Assessment
  • The process of conceptualizing various
  • hazards in order to make judgments about
  • their likelihood and the need for various
    preventative measures.
  • The concept of risk includes
  • The nature of, the likelihood of, the frequency
    of, the seriousness of,
  • and the imminence of.

20
Types of Predictive Schemes
  • Clinical prediction The prediction is based on
    clinical experience and judgment.
  • Actuarial prediction The prediction is based on
    a statistical scheme or formula.
  • Anamnestic prediction The prediction is based
    on a specific analysis of how a particular person
    has acted in the past in similar situations.

21
Questions
  • In the field of criminal justice,
  • what are psychiatrists, psychologists,
  • and researchers trying to predict?
  • How would this relate to the crimes of
  • domestic violence, child abuse, suicide,
  • and the sexual offender?

22
Prediction of Sexual Offending
  • The task is to assess a
  • sex offenders
  • degree of risk to the community.
  • Why?
  • Most jurisdictions have laws governing sex
    offenders
  • for example, if there is a likelihood of
  • committing a similar offense in the future, then
    certain procedures such as registration
  • with the police or community takes place.

23
Prediction of Sexual Offending
  • Convicted rapist reconviction rate 22.8
    (10-36).
  • Child molesters reconviction rate 20.4
    (4-38).
  • Homosexual child molesters reconviction rate
    double that of heterosexual child molesters
    (18.3-35.2).
  • Incest child molesters reconviction rate 8.5.
  • Based on follow-up studies (Quinsey,
    Lalumiere, Rice Harris, 1995). Weighted
    averages. Measured only those offenses that were
    discovered.

24
  • Despite the moderate predictive power
  • that psychologists and psychiatrists display
  • and despite the warnings from
  • mental health professionals
  • that predictions may be problematic,
  • the courts
  • often ignore the warnings
  • and at times invite such predictions.
  • (Barefoot v. Estell, 1983)

25
Criminal Profiling
  • A method used by behavioral scientists
  • and the police to narrow the field of criminal
    suspects who possess certain behavioral and
    personality characteristics that are revealed by
    the way a crime was committed.

26
  • Criminal Investigative Analysis
  • (Profiling)
  • Does Not Identify a Specific Suspect,
  • It Formulates an Initial Description
  • Of the Most Likely Suspect.

27
QUESTION
  • How might forensic psychology
  • assist social policy in the future?
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