Handbook of Forensic Psychology :Resource for Mental Health and Legal Professionals

Publication subTitle :Resource for Mental Health and Legal Professionals

Author: O'Donohue   William;Levensky   Eric R.  

Publisher: Elsevier Science‎

Publication year: 2004

E-ISBN: 9780080495101

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780125241960

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9780125241960

Subject: B84-06 心理学派别及其研究;D917 犯罪学;D919 法医学

Language: ENG

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Description

Forensic psychology has mushroomed into a diverse and increasingly complex field that is equal parts law and psychology. Psychologists act as expert witnesses in legal cases - sometimes without knowing much about the laws involved, and legal professionals rely on the assessment of psychologists sometimes without knowing much about how such assessments are made.

The purpose of this handbook is to provide professionals with current, practical, and empirically based information to guide their work in forensic settings, or to better their understanding of the issues and debates in forensic psychology.

Divided into four sections, the Handbook of Forensic Psychology covers basic issues, assessment, mental disorders and forensic psychology, and special topics. The basic issue chapters present a primer on law for the psychologist, a primer on psychology for attorneys, an overview of ethical issues relevant to forensic psychology, and a chapter on forensic report writing. The assessment section discusses factors and measures relevant for assessing a variety of behaviors, propensities, and capabilities, including dangerousness, violence, suicide, competency, substance abuse, PTSD and neuropsychological evaluations, as well as discussing interviewing children and child custody evaluations. Additional chapters discuss eyewitness testimony, recovered memory, polygraphs, sexual harassment, juror selection, and issues of ethnicity in forensic psychology.

Chapter

Chapter 2. An Introduction to Psychology for Attorneys

Chapter 3. Ethical Issues in Forensic Psychology

Chapter 4. Forensic Report writing

Part II: Assessment

Chapter 5. Assessment of Dangerousness and Criminal Responsibility

Chapter 6. Issues in the Assessment, Communication, and Management of Risk for Violence

Chapter 7. Forensic and Ethical Issues in the Assessment and Treatment of the Suicidal Patient

Chapter 8. Assessing Intent and Criminal Responsibility

Chapter 9. Assessing Adjudicative Competency: Using Legal and Empirical Principles to Inform Practice

Chapter 10. Assessing Mental Competency in the Elderly

Chapter 11. Child Custody Evaluations

Chapter 12. Forensic Interviewing and Assessment Issues with Children

Chapter 13. Evaluation of Psychological Damages

Chapter 14. Detecting Malingering in Forensic Neuropsychological Evaluations in Litigants with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

Chapter 15. The Forensic Assessment of Substance Abuse

Chapter 16. Assessment of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

Part III: Mental Disorders and Forensic Psychology

Chapter 17. Conduct Disorders and Impulse Control in Children

Chapter 18. What Every Forensic Psychologist Should Know about Psychopathic Personality

Chapter 19. Sexual Deviance and Forensic Psychology: A Primer

Chapter 20. Disorders of Impulse Control

Chapter 21. Developmental Disabilities and Mental Retardation

Part IV: Special Topics

Chapter 22. Issues in Eyewitness Testimony

Chapter 23. In Search of Recovered Memories

Chapter 24. A Daubert Testing of Hypnotically Refreshed Testimony in the Criminal Courts

Chapter 25. A Critical Analysis of the Polygraph

Chapter 26. Nonverbal Detection of Deception in Forensic Contexts

Chapter 27. Forensic Issues in Sexual Harassment

Chapter 28. Legal Issues in Child Abuse and Neglect

Chapter 29. Partner Violence: Assessment, Prediction, and Intervention

Chapter 30. Elder Abuse: Guidelines for Treatment

Chapter 31. Involuntary Commitment

Chapter 32. Jurors Can Be Selected: Noninformation, Misinformation, and Their Strategic Uses for Jury Selection

Chapter 33. Issues of Ethnicity in Forensic Psychology: A Model for Hispanics in the United States

Chapter 34. Psychology in a Secure Setting

Chapter 35. Evaluation of Youth in the Juvenile Justice System

Chapter 36. The Road to Perdition: Extreme Influence Tactics in the Interrogation Room

Chapter 37. What's Good for the Goose Cooks the Gander: Inconsistencies between the Law and Psychology of Voluntary Intoxication and Sexual Assault

Index

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