article published in law reviewThis article argues that mental illness should no longer be the basis for a special defense of insanity. Instead, mental disorder should be considered in criminal cases only if relevant to other excuse doctrines, such as lack of mens rea, self-defense and duress, as those defenses have been defined under modern subjectively-oriented codes. With the advent of these subjectively defined doctrines (a development which, ironically, took place during the same period that insanity formulations expanded), the insanity defense has outlived its usefulness, normatively and practically. Modern official formulations of the defense are overbroad because, fairly construed, they exculpate the vast majority of people who comm...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.In the last 15 years a flurry of legislative ac...
This article will consider whether the current common law defence of insanity is ineffective and in ...
Legal insanity is an element of many legal systems, and it has often stirred debate. It appears that...
This article argues that mental illness should no longer be the basis for a special defense of insan...
This article will first explore the reasons for the controversy over the insanity defense to provide...
Mental disorder among criminal defendants affects every stage of the criminal justice process, from ...
This Article calls for the creation of a generic partial excuse for diminished rationality from ment...
This article, which is based on and expands on an amicus brief the authors submitted to the United S...
This article, written for a symposium on "Criminal Law and the Excuses," defends the "Integrationist...
This article addresses why mental disorder is relevant to criminal responsibility. It begins by cons...
With the enactment of the Insanity Defense Reform Act of 1984, sweeping changes were wrought in the ...
This article examines the mental impairment (insanity) defense in the Australian state of Victoria a...
Insanity defense is primarily used in criminal prosecutions. It is based on the assumption that at t...
This Article investigates jurisdictions’ compliance with M’Naghten’s directive for how to treat delu...
Currently there is a push toward standardization of mental defects or diseases that can be used to s...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.In the last 15 years a flurry of legislative ac...
This article will consider whether the current common law defence of insanity is ineffective and in ...
Legal insanity is an element of many legal systems, and it has often stirred debate. It appears that...
This article argues that mental illness should no longer be the basis for a special defense of insan...
This article will first explore the reasons for the controversy over the insanity defense to provide...
Mental disorder among criminal defendants affects every stage of the criminal justice process, from ...
This Article calls for the creation of a generic partial excuse for diminished rationality from ment...
This article, which is based on and expands on an amicus brief the authors submitted to the United S...
This article, written for a symposium on "Criminal Law and the Excuses," defends the "Integrationist...
This article addresses why mental disorder is relevant to criminal responsibility. It begins by cons...
With the enactment of the Insanity Defense Reform Act of 1984, sweeping changes were wrought in the ...
This article examines the mental impairment (insanity) defense in the Australian state of Victoria a...
Insanity defense is primarily used in criminal prosecutions. It is based on the assumption that at t...
This Article investigates jurisdictions’ compliance with M’Naghten’s directive for how to treat delu...
Currently there is a push toward standardization of mental defects or diseases that can be used to s...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.In the last 15 years a flurry of legislative ac...
This article will consider whether the current common law defence of insanity is ineffective and in ...
Legal insanity is an element of many legal systems, and it has often stirred debate. It appears that...