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52 Contagion, Identity, Misinformation: Challenges for Psychiatric Ethics in the Age of the Internet
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Introduction Introduction
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Criminal Offending and Mental Illness Criminal Offending and Mental Illness
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The Problem of “Evil” The Problem of “Evil”
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Criminal Responsibility and Mental Illness Criminal Responsibility and Mental Illness
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Moral Responsibility in the Shadow of Neuroscience Moral Responsibility in the Shadow of Neuroscience
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The Perils of the Assessment of Risk The Perils of the Assessment of Risk
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Psychiatry, the Social Contract, and Crime Psychiatry, the Social Contract, and Crime
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Conclusion Conclusion
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References References
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70 Animal Welfare Considerations and Ethical Oversight of the Use of Animals in Psychiatric Research
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64 Ethical Issues in Working with Criminal Offenders
Get accessProfessor Michael Robertson, Centre for Values, Ethics & Law in Medicine, The University of Sydney
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Published:06 January 2015
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Abstract
This chapter examines the ethical issues associated with criminal offending by presenting a conceptualization of crime within the context of social contract theory. It also considers two issues relevant to psychiatry: the common problem of the person with a mental illness and the professional ethics of psychiatry and its fundamentally contractarian nature. It begins by discussing the problem of criminal offending amongst people affected by mental illness, followed by an analysis of the problem of “evil” in relation to mental illness. It then describes problems surrounding the conceptualization of criminal responsibility in the setting of psychiatric disorder, as well as the putative contribution of neuroscience. Finally, the chapter assesses the contractarian responsibilities of professional psychiatric ethics in the area of criminal offending, paying particular attention to the ethical challenges faced by psychiatrists working with criminal offenders.
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