This Article reviews the use of mental health experts to provide testimony on the future dangerousness of individuals who have already been convicted of a crime that qualifies them for the death penalty. Although this practice is common in many states that still retain the death penalty, it most frequently occurs in Texas because of a statute that makes it mandatory for juries to determine the future dangerousness of the defendant they have just found guilty. Both the American Psychiatric Association and the American Psychological Association have protested the use of mental health professionals in this setting because there are no scientifically valid methods to make these predictions for people who face long periods of incarceration in ma...
This article examines these issues in the context of an important and emerging constitutional challe...
There is emerging awareness on the potential arbitrariness and unconstitutionality of executing pers...
This Article concerns the due process requirements in determining a mental patient’s competency to m...
This Article reviews the use of mental health experts to provide testimony on the future dangerousne...
This Article reviews the use of mental health experts to provide testimony on the future dangerousne...
This Article reviews the use of mental health experts to provide testimony on the future dangerousne...
In Furman v. Georgia, the United States Supreme Court held that it was unconstitutional to administe...
This article provides a psychiatric perspective on the problems Atkins raises for courts that handle...
In Furman v. Georgia, the United States Supreme Court held that it was unconstitutional to administe...
In Furman v. Georgia, the United States Supreme Court held that it was unconstitutional to administe...
Almost every American state allows civil commitment upon a finding that a person, as a result of men...
Almost every American state allows civil commitment upon a finding that a person, as a result of men...
Today, people with mental illnesses in the United States are ten times more likely to be incarcerate...
The defendant-first approach advocated in this Article is more difficult to implement than either th...
This article reviews some issues in psychiatry, psychology, and the law with the goal of increasing ...
This article examines these issues in the context of an important and emerging constitutional challe...
There is emerging awareness on the potential arbitrariness and unconstitutionality of executing pers...
This Article concerns the due process requirements in determining a mental patient’s competency to m...
This Article reviews the use of mental health experts to provide testimony on the future dangerousne...
This Article reviews the use of mental health experts to provide testimony on the future dangerousne...
This Article reviews the use of mental health experts to provide testimony on the future dangerousne...
In Furman v. Georgia, the United States Supreme Court held that it was unconstitutional to administe...
This article provides a psychiatric perspective on the problems Atkins raises for courts that handle...
In Furman v. Georgia, the United States Supreme Court held that it was unconstitutional to administe...
In Furman v. Georgia, the United States Supreme Court held that it was unconstitutional to administe...
Almost every American state allows civil commitment upon a finding that a person, as a result of men...
Almost every American state allows civil commitment upon a finding that a person, as a result of men...
Today, people with mental illnesses in the United States are ten times more likely to be incarcerate...
The defendant-first approach advocated in this Article is more difficult to implement than either th...
This article reviews some issues in psychiatry, psychology, and the law with the goal of increasing ...
This article examines these issues in the context of an important and emerging constitutional challe...
There is emerging awareness on the potential arbitrariness and unconstitutionality of executing pers...
This Article concerns the due process requirements in determining a mental patient’s competency to m...