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Applications of Forensic Psychology - All Lectures/ Seminar

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Lecture notes of 56 pages for the course Applications of Forensic Psychology at UOY (To be Updated)

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Uploaded on
July 13, 2022
Number of pages
56
Written in
2021/2022
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John fisher
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L1 – Criminal Justice Framework
Structure of Criminal Justice Agencies (As a chain of events)
Criminal - Police
Justice - Crown Prosecution Service
System - Courts
- HM Prisons
- HM Probation Service
- Youth offending/ Custody Service
- Research HQ

External Agencies
- Parole Board – Risk of reoffending & Formulation of treatment strategies
- Youth Justice Board
- HM Inspectorate of Constabulary & Fire & Rescue Service
- HM Inspectorate of Prisons
- HM Inspectorate of Probation

Overall structure of CJ System
- Home office – Police
- Ministry of justice – Crown prosecution service, courts, Youth offending
services, HM Prisons and Probation Service

Key courts of focus
- Crown court – Dire offenses
- Magistrates – Moderate offenses
- County Court – Civil matters

Specific Her Majesty Prison & Probation service (HMPPS)
parties - Running prison and probation services
- Rehabilitation services
- Support for reoffenders
- Management of private sector prisons

Prisons
- Category A  B  C  D
- Max security  Open prison

HM Prison Service
- 117 prisons in England and Wales (13 Private)
- Stable population ~80000

National Probation Services / CRCs (Community Rehab Companies)
- Preparation of pre-sentence reports for courts
- Preparation of release of offenders + Assessment of release

Youth Services
- Youth Justice Board & Youth Custody Services
- Special catering to different needs of the Youth as opposed to adults

, Youth Offending Services
- To support the safety of young people and physical + Mental health
- YOS In every authority of England and Wales

Psychologists 1946 – Psychologists in Prisons
in the CJ 1990s – Large increase in forensic psychologists
System
Employed in Prison services, probation, police, courts, hospitals, academia…

Effective View on rehabilitation
treatment - James McGuire – Different programmes work for different people

9 Principles for effective treatment (Maguire & Priestley, 1995)
- Need to be empirical and grounded in theory
- Target criminogenic needs (causing or likely to cause criminal behaviour)
- Need to be responsive to learning needs of clients
- Need to use known methods and effective methods (CBT)
- Must teach skills
- Must address a range of criminogenic factors
- Right dose of treatment
- Focus on clear care pathway
- Must have treatment integrity

Updated principles – Risk, Need, Responsivity (RNR)
- Risk – Right dose of intervention and treatment
- Need – Link to crime & solve the need
- Responsivity – How subjects respond
- E.g. (Bonta & Andrews, 2017)

Roles of a Prison and Probation
forensic - Assessment and treatment of offenders
psychologist - Design and delivery of training of staff and offenders
- Consultancy and advise (E.g. Hostage negotiation, data analysis)
- Applied research
- Court work – Attendance and witness testimony

Police force
- Statistical crime analysis
- Behavioural Investigative advisors

Working in courts
- Comments on different aspects of court
- E.g. Fitness to plead, intellectual functioning…

Community Forensic Services (CFMHS Community Forensic Mental Health service)
- Manage cases of high risk individuals
- Care, advice, education and specialist interventions

Special hospitals and secure units
- Deciding treatment of patients
- Treatment of offenders with personality disorders and mental disorders

,Challenges State of prisons
of Criminal - Plagued by drugs, violence, poor living conditions, too much time in cell,
justice lack of rehab, staff shortages…
system
State of probation
- Inadequate probational services

Sentencing White Paper Launch – Smart approach to sentencing
- Serving 2/3 of sentence before potential parole instead of ½

Discussion
- May be useful for dire offenders  Serve more and increase potential
rehab chance
- Not useful for minor offenders  May learn more criminal behaviour
while in prison




L2 – Theories of Crime
Crime An act that is illegal and can be punished by law
- 1 in 3 men in UK has a criminal record by 40y

Yet is somehow subjective – Can rape be justified?
- Biological view – Evolutionary adaptation
- Sociological view – Male Patriarchy

Key is subjective views towards law and legality
- Socio-views & the relative nature of crime (Marsh et al., 2006)
- E.g. 14y + 13y consensual sex  Deemed as not problematic
- E.g. 14y + 5y consensual sex  Deemed as problematic


Biological Nature of biological theories in forensic psychology
theories - A distal and fixed matter
- Is hard to change and nothing much can be done
- Forensic implication – May influence biases towards attractive people in
court

Genetic Predisposition
- Being male – 76% Conviction, 95% in prison (MoJ, 2012)
- Abnormal genes – XYY “Supermale” genes leading to hyper aggression
(Price et al., 1966; Epps, 1995)
- Familial trends – Criminal behaviour seen as “running in the family”
(Curran & Renzetti, 2001) – But may be due to being environmental, close
family live in similar environments
- 53% juveniles with convicted family member had conviction themselves as
opposed to 24% (Farrington et al., 1996)
- Twin influence – MZ twins 52% concordance rate for offending, DZ twins
21% (Raine, 1993)
- Adoption differences – Comparing adoptive and biological parents and

, child (Blackburn, 1993)
- Suggests biological > socio-impact? (Mednick et al., 1984)




Brain and crime
- Higher head injuries in criminals, especially juvenile offenders
(Rosenbaum et al., 1994)
- War vets with frontal lobe damage engaged in criminal activities (Brower
& Price, 2001)
- Violent offenders showed sig. less activity in prefrontal lobe (Raine et al.,
1997)

Acquired brain function and violence
- Birth complications & violence (e.g. Moffitt 1993; Raine et al., 1994;
Piquero & Tibbetts, 1999)
- Smoking in pregnancy & violence (e.g. Brennan et al., 1999) – Can be
denoted with genetic or behavioural impact
- Foetal alcohol syndrome & violence (e.g Streissguth et al., 1996)
- Environmental lead levels & violent crime/homicide (e.g. Stretesky &
Lynch, 2004; Feigenbaum & Muller, 2016)
- Seafood diet (Omega 3) & national homicide rate (Hibbeln, 2001)

Brain chemistry
- Too much dopamine or too little serotonin: more likely to commit
impulsive crimes (Seo et al., 2003)
- Slow autonomic nervous system makes it less likely for criminal
behaviour to be inhibited and the person may be unable to conform/learn
from mistakes (Mednick, 1977; Raine, 1993).
- Weak and inconsistent association between testosterone levels and
aggression in adults (Archer et al., 1998)

Early biological theories
- Crime was a result of inborn abnormalities
- Can be distinguished from physical characteristics (Lombroso, 1876)
- Focus on evolutionary throwbacks with distinct characteristics
- Darwin influenced
- *Fail to focus on environmental factors

Biological theory – Constitutional Types (Sheldon, 1949; Ellis, 2000)
- Somatotypes – Ectomorph, Endomorph, Mesomorph
- 57% offender sample is mesomorphic, control group 19% (Glueck &
Glueck, 1956)

Biosocial theory – Mednick (1977)
- Individual susceptibility from inheriting a slow autonomic nervous system
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I am graduating this year (2022) with a First Class Honors. These are the notes that helped me achieve this. Please do not hesitate to contact me for clarification or help on the notes! Good luck on your studies :DDD

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