Abnormal Behavior and the Criminal Justice SystemThe United States has the highest per-capita imprisonment rate in the world. In 1990, the prison population across the country jumped 8.2 percent. On an average day, 100,000 crimes are committed and over 35,000 people are arrested. The judicial and criminal justice systems are overwhelmed by this growing burden, and are ill-equipped to handle the large number of individuals who suffer from some form of mental disorder - roughly 35 percent of those currently in the criminal justice system. A lack of training and understanding has led to confusion and inadequate control in the treatment of these individuals. At what point should criminal justice personnel turn the management of these cases over to mental health professionals? Abnormal Behavior and the Criminal Justice System examines the issues behind the supervision of these criminals whose special needs are often neglected. Part I includes an analysis of the criminal personality and the psychopath. Drawing on the cases of such noted figures as Charles Manson, Ted Bundy, the Hillside Strangler and others, Robert G. Meyer examines different aspects of deviant personalities. These types include the Antisocial Personality Disorder, Impulse Disorders, Alcohol and Drug-Abuse Disorders, Sexual Disorders, Organic Brain Damage Disorders, and Anxiety, Dissociative, and Sleep Disorders. Part II looks at topics that are of direct application and practical consequence to the criminal justice student and practitioner. These include violence, the detection of deception, incompetency, criminal responsibility, civil commitment and the prediction of dangerousness, psychopharmacology in the criminal justice system, and specific criminal justice personnel issues. The detailed emphasis on behavioral descriptions, applied issues, and a practical plan for immediate implementation make this an innovative and important text. Abnormal Behavior and the Criminal Justice System will be an essential tool for both students and practitioners of criminal justice. |
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Contents
The Criminal Personality the Psychopath the Antisocial | 17 |
The Personality and Impulse Disorders | 39 |
The Alcohol and DrugAbuse Disorders | 61 |
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abnormal addiction adolescence adults aggressive alcohol amnesia and/or antipsychotic antisocial personality antisocial personality disorder anxiety disorders avoid barbiturates behavior benzodiazepines Bianchi blood brain cause chapter child abuse chronic client Clinical cocaine commitment common commonly conversion disorder Court crime criminal justice system dangerous deception delinquency delusions depression developed diagnosis drugs dysfunction effective emotional evidence example experience factitious disorder factors functioning hallucinations homosexual hyperactivity hypnosis hypochondriasis impulse increase individuals insanity defense interpersonal involved issue juvenile killed male malingering medications mental disorder mental health mg/day multiple personality murder normal occur offender pain panic disorder paranoid disorders paranoid schizophrenia parents patient pattern percent personality disorder physical police polygraph potential problems psychiatric psychogenic amnesia psychological psychopaths psychotic pyromania rape relationships response schizophrenia sexual situation social somatoform disorders specific stress suicide symptoms syndrome techniques tests therapist therapy tion treatment typically usually victims violence York