Discussions on the conceptualization of addiction are ongoing, most commonly by presenting a dichotomy between the Brain Disease Model and the Choice Model. In practice, the debate may extend beyond the social sciences to the field of law. This study tests the consequences of presenting two different perspectives on addiction in criminal courts, by using vignettes of an addicted offender, who committed either a property or a violent offence. The vignettes were presented to 171 criminal law students and 109 public prosecutors from the Netherlands, who had to judge the degree of accountability (the Dutch insanity defence equivalence), the sentence length and recidivism risk of the offender. This study found that accountability was judged sign...
The article begins by contrasting medical and moral views of addiction and how such views influence ...
This chapter has two simple underlying theses. The first is that it is impossible to understand the ...
Substance addiction affects millions of individuals worldwide and yet there is no consensus regardin...
Discussions on the conceptualization of addiction are ongoing, most commonly by presenting a dichoto...
Addiction is pervasively present within the criminal justice sector, requiring legal professionals t...
Addiction is pervasively present within the criminal justice sector, resulting in legal professional...
Debates continue over whether the prevailing neuroscientific model of addiction as a brain disease i...
This chapter is a contribution to a volume, Addiction and Choice, edited by Nick Heather and Gabriel...
There is a debate among addiction specialists about the degree to which addicts can exert control ov...
During four months, several courts were visited to study the role of addiction in criminal cases in ...
This thesis investigates the extent to which addiction and its associated neurobiological impairment...
The role of the brain in drug and alcohol abuse has become an increasingly studied variable in the d...
Our aim was to explore how (neuro)scientific understanding of addiction as a brain-disease impacts c...
Although there is debate in the scientific and clinical literature about how much choice addicts hav...
A defendant is criminally responsible for his action only if he is shown to have engaged in a guilty...
The article begins by contrasting medical and moral views of addiction and how such views influence ...
This chapter has two simple underlying theses. The first is that it is impossible to understand the ...
Substance addiction affects millions of individuals worldwide and yet there is no consensus regardin...
Discussions on the conceptualization of addiction are ongoing, most commonly by presenting a dichoto...
Addiction is pervasively present within the criminal justice sector, requiring legal professionals t...
Addiction is pervasively present within the criminal justice sector, resulting in legal professional...
Debates continue over whether the prevailing neuroscientific model of addiction as a brain disease i...
This chapter is a contribution to a volume, Addiction and Choice, edited by Nick Heather and Gabriel...
There is a debate among addiction specialists about the degree to which addicts can exert control ov...
During four months, several courts were visited to study the role of addiction in criminal cases in ...
This thesis investigates the extent to which addiction and its associated neurobiological impairment...
The role of the brain in drug and alcohol abuse has become an increasingly studied variable in the d...
Our aim was to explore how (neuro)scientific understanding of addiction as a brain-disease impacts c...
Although there is debate in the scientific and clinical literature about how much choice addicts hav...
A defendant is criminally responsible for his action only if he is shown to have engaged in a guilty...
The article begins by contrasting medical and moral views of addiction and how such views influence ...
This chapter has two simple underlying theses. The first is that it is impossible to understand the ...
Substance addiction affects millions of individuals worldwide and yet there is no consensus regardin...