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Philosophers have recently found fertile ground in the area of intersection between neuroscience and criminal law. They have, for example, entered lively debates concerning the extent to which findings in neuroscience might undermine attributions of criminal responsibility, and whether and how neuroscientific evidence, such as brain scan results, should be used in criminal trials.1
This philosophical attention has, for the most part, been limited to examining the ways in which neuroscience may bear on assignments of guilt and responsibility in criminal trials. Yet neuroscientific technologies are already playing other roles in the criminal justice process. For example, criminal justice authorities sometimes mandate the administration of brain-active drugs as part of programmes to prevent recidivism; a number of European and North American criminal justice systems provide for the administration of drugs that attenuate sexual desire to prevent recidivism in sex offenders;2 and methadone treatment has been used in similar ways in offenders with a history of opioid abuse.3
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