The law insists on maintaining mental disorder as a predicate for a wide array of legal provisions, in both the criminal justice system and the civil law. Among adults, only a person with a mental disease or defect can escape conviction for an intentional, unjustified crime on grounds of cognitive or volitional impairment.\u27 Only people with mental illness or mental disorder may be subjected to indeterminate preventive commitment based on dangerousness. Under the laws of many states, only people with a mental disorder are prevented from making decisions about treatment, criminal charges, wills, contracts, and a host of other important aspects of life. What is it about mental illness that merits such special legal treatment? Why ar...
This essay considers the foundational rationale for why the law treats at least some mentally disord...
This article begins and ends with a call for more empirical research to understand the connection be...
This paper is a chapter that will appear in REFORMING CRIMINAL JUSTICE: A REPORT OF THE ACADEMY FOR ...
Mental disorder among criminal defendants affects every stage of the criminal justice process, from ...
This chapter provides an introduction to the major classes of mental disorder and the ways in which ...
Professor Hardisty examines the use of the term mental illness by the law, focusing upon competenc...
This paper reviews the various ways in which an offender\u27s mental illness can have an effect on l...
This article addresses why mental disorder is relevant to criminal responsibility. It begins by cons...
How can we understand the troubling under-inclusiveness of our law of mental disorder – its failure ...
This article argues that mental illness should no longer be the basis for a special defense of insan...
This article describes recent devel-opments in mental health laws in the United States, especially a...
For centuries, the criminal law has been struggling with the question what to do with mentally disor...
The effect of mental disorders on criminal responsibility seems to be more or less the same in all j...
The problems which exist for a discussion about the relationship between the so-called mentally-diso...
A number of recent events makes it timely to reconsider certain aspects of the relation between psyc...
This essay considers the foundational rationale for why the law treats at least some mentally disord...
This article begins and ends with a call for more empirical research to understand the connection be...
This paper is a chapter that will appear in REFORMING CRIMINAL JUSTICE: A REPORT OF THE ACADEMY FOR ...
Mental disorder among criminal defendants affects every stage of the criminal justice process, from ...
This chapter provides an introduction to the major classes of mental disorder and the ways in which ...
Professor Hardisty examines the use of the term mental illness by the law, focusing upon competenc...
This paper reviews the various ways in which an offender\u27s mental illness can have an effect on l...
This article addresses why mental disorder is relevant to criminal responsibility. It begins by cons...
How can we understand the troubling under-inclusiveness of our law of mental disorder – its failure ...
This article argues that mental illness should no longer be the basis for a special defense of insan...
This article describes recent devel-opments in mental health laws in the United States, especially a...
For centuries, the criminal law has been struggling with the question what to do with mentally disor...
The effect of mental disorders on criminal responsibility seems to be more or less the same in all j...
The problems which exist for a discussion about the relationship between the so-called mentally-diso...
A number of recent events makes it timely to reconsider certain aspects of the relation between psyc...
This essay considers the foundational rationale for why the law treats at least some mentally disord...
This article begins and ends with a call for more empirical research to understand the connection be...
This paper is a chapter that will appear in REFORMING CRIMINAL JUSTICE: A REPORT OF THE ACADEMY FOR ...