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Psychology and Criminal Behaviour

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Title: Psychology and Criminal Behaviour


1
Psychology and Criminal Behaviour
  • Dr. M. Clark

2
MENTAL DISTURBANCE AND CRIME
  • Mental disturbance mental illness, mental
    impairment, severe mental impairment,
    psychopathic disorder and any other disorder of
    mind.
  • Mental disorder Vs abnormality
  • Both crime and mental disturbance are not clear
    cut phenomena
  • Issue of cause and effect

3
Legal aspects
  • Insanity defense (NGRI)
  • Incompetence to stand trial
  • diminished responsibility

4
Semantic issues
  • Responsible
  • Concise oxford dictionary
  • Lable to be called to account (to person or for
    a thing)
  • Being morally accountable for ones ations
    capable of rationl conduct
  • Law not necessarily concerne with morality
    public and private morality

5
Components of legal blameworthiness
  • An act does not make a person legaly guit unless
    his or her mind is also legally blameworthy
    mens rea criminal intent
  • Actus reus

6
Erosions of liability
  • Children
  • Intoxication - in general the law holds that
    being in state of intoxication is no defense
    lesser charge
  • Provocation
  • Unfitness to plead
  • Diminished responsibility

7
PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
  • Core concepts
  • The importance of context in defining and
    understanding abnormality
  • The continuum between normal and abnormal
    behaviour
  • Cultural and historical relativism in defining
    and classifying abnormal behaviour no universal
    definition of abnormality
  • the advantages and limitations of diagnosis
  • labelling theory
  • Thamas Szaz the myth of mental illness, one
    flew over the Cuckoos nest
  • The principle of multiple causality
  • Predisposing causes nature and nurture
  • Precipitating causes situational triggers

8
CRITERA
  • COMMONLY USED CRITERA FOR DEFINING ABNORMLITY
    (HIDES)
  • Help seeking
  • Irrationality/dangerousness
  • Deviance
  • Emotional distress
  • Significant impairment

9
(Prins, 1999)
  • OUTLINE CLASSIFICATION OF MENTAL DISORDERS
  • The Functional Psychosis the affective disorders

  • Schizophrenic illness
  • The Neurosis mild depression, anxiety states,
    hysteria, obsessional states
  • Mental disorder as a result of infection,
    disease, metabolic and similar disturbances,
    trauma
  • Mental disorder due to the ageing process
  • Personality disorders
  • Sexual disorders
  • Substance abuse
  • Mental Impairment (learning disabilities)
  • DSM IV
  • ICD-10

10
THE FUNCTIONAL PSYCHOSIS
  • Affective disorders major depression, mania and
    hypomania, Manic depressive psychosis,

11
Major depression
  • Definition a depressive illness is one in which
    the primary and dominant characteristic is a
    change in mood consisting of a feeling tone of
    sadness which may vary from mild despondency to
    the most abject despair.
  • Change in mood is fixed
  • Appearance and general behaviour depression
    with retardation /depression with anxiety
  • Thinking inability to concentrate, formulate
    ideas, collect thoughts and make decisions
    difficulty in carrying out intellectual tasks or
    dealing with a problem
  • Painful thoughts self concerned preoccupied
    with himself and his difficulties self blame
  • hypochondriasis
  • Loss of interest work, home and family,
    recreation, personal hygiene and appearance
  • Derealisation and depersonalisation
  • Disorders of perception - illusions
  • Sleep disturbance
  • Loss of appetite

12
Grief reactions
  • Normal grief reactions
  • Atypical and morbid grief reactions

13
Mania and Hypomania
  • The antithesis of those seen in the depressive
    state
  • Fixed change in mood which is one of excitement
    and elation
  • Patient is optimistic, excited , marked general
    feeling of well being
  • Marked pressure of activity effects thinking,
    speech and general activity
  • Excessive talk
  • Patient distractible
  • Flight of ideas
  • Puns
  • Ceaseless activity
  • Enthusiasm and good humour have infectious
    quality
  • Overconfident, lack reserve , obstacles ignored
  • Expansive friendly and interfering
  • No insight
  • Nuisance to others interfering
  • Difficulties they get into
  • Spend great deal of money, buy unnecessary
    things, and enter unwise legal agreements in
    business. Issue cheques they cannot meet
  • drink excessively, engage in unwise sexual
    activity
  • when thwarted they may become violent and angry
  • treatment may have to be arranged compulsory

14
Manic depressive psychosis
  • Bipolar disorder differs significantly from
    clinical depression, although the symptoms for
    the depressive phase of the illness are similar.
  • Most people who have bipolar disorder talk about
    experiencing "highs" and "lows" the highs are
    periods of mania, the lows periods of depression.
  • These swings can be severe, ranging from extreme
    energy to deep despair. The severity of the mood
    swings and the way they disrupt normal life
    activities distinguish bipolar mood episodes from
    ordinary mood changes.

15
Symptoms of mania
  • - the "highs" of bipolar disorder
  • Increased physical and mental activity and energy
  • Heightened mood, exaggerated optimism and
    self-confidence
  • Excessive irritability, aggressive behavior
  • Decreased need for sleep without experiencing
    fatigue
  • Grandiose delusions, inflated sense of
    self-importance
  • Racing speech, racing thoughts, flight of ideas
  • Impulsiveness, poor judgment, distractibility
  • Reckless behavior 
  • In the most severe cases, delusions and
    hallucinations

16
Symptoms of depression
  • - the "lows" of bipolar disorder
  • Prolonged sadness or unexplained crying spells
  • Significant changes in appetite and sleep
    patterns
  • Irritability, anger, worry, agitation, anxiety
  • Pessimism, indifference
  • Loss of energy, persistent lethargy
  • Feelings of guilt, worthlessness
  • Inability to concentrate, indecisiveness
  • Inability to take pleasure in former interests,
    social withdrawal
  • Unexplained aches and pains
  • Recurring thoughts of death or suicide

17
Schizophrenia
  • Overview
  • Fundamental disturbances in personality,
    thinking, emotional life, behaviour, interests,
    and relationships with other people
  • Withdraw from environment
  • Internal disintegration of thinking, feeling and
    behaviour
  • Incongruity between emotional states and thoughts
    and actions
  • A tendency to morbid projection

18
OVERVIEW
  • Withdrawal
  • Generalised loss of interest in the environment
  • Diminutition in response to external influences
  • Loss of natural affection for relatives and
    friends
  • Thought Disorder
  • Early stages general vagueness and wooliness of
    speech lack coherence
  • Glass wall
  • Thoughts and ideas disconnected
  • Unable to continue normal sequence of thought and
    speech
  • Thought blockage thought deprivation
  • Paucity of ideas repetitive and stereotypes
    themes
  • Thought crowding
  • Associations
  • Loss of conceptual thinking in concrete terms
  • Cause and effect may be interchanged
  • Talk in riddles
  • Invent new words

19
Change in affect
  • Emotionally flattened loss of natural
    affection, inappropriate emotional reactions
  • Insensitive and inconsiderate to other peoples
    experiences and feelings
  • Takes offence readily and tends to isolate
    himself in his environment
  • Increasingly develops a state of apathy
  • Emotional incongruity
  • Experience extremely rapid change of emotion
  • Inappropriate emotional responses
  • Emotional responses may be disproportionate and
    inappropriate to the stimulus severe emotional
    outbursts without provocation anger, violence
    or marked terror
  • Ambivalence

20
Disturbances in behaviour and motor functions
  • General demeanour is awkward
  • Grimacing, twitching and stereotyped movement of
    parts of the body
  • Conduct disconnected from other aspects of the
    patients life waxy flexibility echopraxia
    echolalia
  • Negativism

21
Delusion formation and the paranoid disposition
  • Delusion false belief which is not amenable to
    persuasion or argument
  • Characteristic of schizophrenia
  • Primary or secondary delusions
  • Paranoid disturbance of the individuals
    relationship to the world
  • Delusions of persecution and delusions of
    grandeur
  • The paranoid disposition is the tendency to
    attribute to the world things which really arise
    from within the person morbid projection may
    vary in form and degree
  • Delusions of reference delusions of persecution
    hypochondriacal delusions
  • Useless to argue

22
Disorders of perception
  • Hallucinations
  • Auditory most common may be perceived as coming
    from inside oneself or from
  • outside
  • Especially common hallucinations talking abut
    patient in the third person running commentary
    thought echo
  • Patients vary with regard to their tendency to
    feel compelled to carry out whatever
  • Voices are frequently abusive
  • Feel compelled to listen and often become angry
  • Visual
  • Tactile
  • Olfactory

23
Varieties of schizophrenia
  • simple
  • hebephrenic
  • catatonic
  • paranoid
  • may change from one type to another during course
    of the illness

24
Simple schizophrenia
  • insidious onset
  • gradual deterioration socially
  • difficulty in establishing time of onset
  • withdrawal of interest in the environment,
    apathy, difficulty in making social contacts,
    poverty of ideation, decline in total performance
  • marked sensitivity and ideas of reference
  • many become socially deviant
  • different from schizoid psychopathy

25
  • Hebephrenic
  • also insidious
  • characterised by thought disorder and emotional
    abnormalities
  • affect inappropriate
  • thought disorder and delusions
  • hallucinations
  • Catatonic
  • acute onset
  • disturbance of behaviour and motor phenomena
  • Paranoid
  • development of delusions, especially delusions of
    persecution
  • late onset
  • delusions may be variable, transient and poorly
    held or systemised highly complex and relatively
    fixed
  • paranoia term given to patients showing a fixed
    delusional system without thought disorder and
    hallucinations

26
THE NEUROSIS
  • Mild depression
  • Anxiety states
  • a disorder in which anxiety is the primary and
    dominant part of the clinical picture
  • morbid pervasive fear or dread
  • affects well being, efficiency and normal
    adjustment
  • prominent feature of many psychiatric illnesses
  • may result in impulsive behaviour

27
Hysterical States
  • patient develops symptoms and signs of illness
    for some real or imagined gain without being
    fully aware of the underlying motive
  • psychogenic illness having a motive of gain
  • may simulate any disease
  • process of dissociation whereby certain
    dynamically important experiences become
    separated from the mainstream of consciousness
    under conditions of stress
  • on account of the gain resulting from the illness
    confused with malingering
  • the hysteric has genuine symptoms
  • Forms of hysterical reaction
  • Dysmnesic
  • Amnesia
  • Fugues
  • Somnambulism
  • Twilight states
  • Conversion symptoms
  • Motor e.g. paralysis, abnormal gait
  • Sensory
  • Visceral e.g. retention of urine
  • Quasi psychotic state Ganser syndrome
  • Hysterical superadditions to normal illness

28
Obsessional States
  • Definition an obsession is a content of
    consciousness, that is, an idea, an impulse to
    action which, when it appears, is accompanied by
    a subjective feeling of compulsion which the
    patient tries to resist but cannot get rid of.
  • Obsessional personality
  • Varieties of obsessional symptoms
  • Obsessional thoughts
  • Obsessional ruminations
  • Obsessional doubts
  • Obsessional vacillations
  • Obsessional phobias
  • Compulsive actions

29
Abnormalities of personality
  • Antisocial Personality Disorder  Lack of regard
    for the moral or legal standards in the local
    culture, marked inability to get along with
    others or abide by societal rules.  Sometimes
    called psychopaths or sociopaths.
  • Avoidant Personality Disorder  Marked social
    inhibition, feelings of inadequacy, and extremely
    sensitive to criticism.
  • Borderline Personality Disorder  Lack of one's
    own identity, with rapid changes in mood, intense
    unstable interpersonal relationships, marked
    impulsively, instability in affect and in self
    image.

30
CONT
  • Dependent Personality Disorder  Extreme need of
    other people, to a point where the person is
    unable to make any decisions or take an
    independent stand on his or her own. Fear of
    separation and submissive behavior. Marked lack
    of decisiveness and self-confidence.
  • Histrionic Personality Disorder  Exaggerated and
    often inappropriate displays of emotional
    reactions, approaching theatricality, in everyday
    behavior. Sudden and rapidly shifting emotion
    expressions.
  • Narcissistic Personality Disorder  Behavior or a
    fantasy of grandiosity, a lack of empathy, a need
    to be admired by others, an inability to see the
    viewpoints of others, and hypersensitive to the
    opinions of others.

31
CONT
  • Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder 
    Characterized by perfectionism and inflexibility
    preoccupation with uncontrollable patterns of
    thought and action.
  • Paranoid Personality Disorder  Marked distrust
    of others, including the belief, without reason,
    that others are exploiting, harming, or trying to
    deceive him or her lack of trust belief of
    others' betrayal belief in hidden meanings
    unforgiving and grudge holding.
  • Schizoid Personality Disorder  Primarily
    characterized by a very limited range of emotion,
    both in expression of and experiencing
    indifferent to social relationships.
  • Schizotypal Personality Disorder   Peculiarities
    of thinking, odd beliefs, and eccentricities of
    appearance,  behavior, interpersonal style, and
    thought (e.g., belief in psychic phenomena and
    having magical powers).

32
cont
  • SEXUAL DISORDERS
  • The paraphilias
  • SUBSTANCE ABUSE
  • MENTAL IMPAIRMENT

33
Mentally Disordered Offenders
  • Insanity is a legal concept which has no formal
    psychiatric meaning
  • From the standpoint of the CJS there are 5
    critical points at which evidence of mental
    disorder affects legal action (Halleck, 1987)
  • police exercise discretion in charging someone
    causing a public nuisance or suspected of a crime
    who may be mentally disordered
  • at the time of trial a defendant may be found
    incompetent or unfit
  • insanity may be pleaded as a defense
  • defendant maybe found guilty but evidence of
    mental disorder might mitigate the severity of
    the sentence
  • convicted prisoners who become mentally
    disordered while in prison may be transferred to
    the mental health system.

34
cont
  • Mentally disordered offenders comprise a diverse
    group whose disorder is sufficiently disabling to
    justify substantially different treatment from
    that of other offenders.

35
Representations of the mentally ill
  • Popular view that mental disorder predisposes
    people to crime
  • Mass media a primary source of public information
    about mental illness
  • Media portrayals of mental illness are false and
    negative (Berlin and Malin, 1991)
  • Link between media portrayals and negative
    attitudes towards mentally ill people
    experiments
  • Diefenback (1997) - television portrays the
    mentally ill as significantly more violent than
    other TV characters and significantly more
    violent than the mentally ill in the real world
    prime time TV portrays the mentally ill as
    having a negative quality of life and a negative
    impact on society
  • Major mental disorder may render people more
    vulnerable to arrest, victim of stigma of media
    gossip about homicidal maniacs

36
epidemiology
  • Hodgins, Mednick, Brennanm Shulsinger and
    Egngberg (1998) Danish birth cohort
  • women and men who had been hospitalised in
    psychiatric wards were more likely to have been
    convicted of a criminal offence than persons with
    no history of psychiatric hospitalisation
  • patients discharged from psychiatric wards are
    more likely than other persons living in the same
    community to commit crimes

37
  • Hodgins (1992) Swedish birth cohort
  • men with major mental disorders were 2.5 times
    more likely than men with no disorder or handicap
    t be registered for a criminal offence
  • 4 times more likely to be registered for a
    violent offence
  • Intellectually handicapped men were three times
    more likely to offend than men with no handicap
  • Five times more likely to commit violent offence
  • Intellectually handicapped women were 4 times
    more likely to offend than women with no disorder
    of handicap
  • 25 times more likely to commit a violent offence
  • Women with major disorders were 5 times more
    likely than women with n disorder to be
    registered for an offence
  • 27 times more likely to be registered for a
    violent offence
  • Taylor (2004) major mental disorder violence
  • not violent prior to psychotic illness
  • delusions responsible for serious violence
  • people who are frightened or depressed by their
    beliefs are more likely to act on them
  • also those trying to get evidence for them
  • when a challenge was posed to the belief, those
    people who took the challenge rather than
    ignoring it and embellished their belief were
    more likely to act violently than the others
  • friends and family most likely to challenge
    delusions
  • most vulnerable to the most serious violence when
    it occurs (Johnston and Taylor, 2003)
  • mothers represent largest single group to be
    targets for violence (Estroff et al 1988)

38
Offender Populations
  • representativeness true and treated prevalence
  • bias police more likely to arrest
  • Gunn et al (1978) - 39 of 149 prisoners showed
    moderate, marked or severe levels of mental
    disturbance depression and anxiety states,
    addictive behaviour - psychotic disturbance was
    rare
  • Conclusion 31 Vs 14
  • Prins (1980) - psychiatric problems are common in
    offender populations - greater percentage of
    mental disorder
  • Feldman (1977) - alternative explanations
  • Main diagnosis substance abuse, personality
    disorder, neurosis, psychosis and organic
    disorders

39
Offending In Psychiatric Patients
  • Early Vs late studies
  • What offences? - violent crime - robbery and rape
  • Mixed results offending among psychiatric
    patients associated more with the same
    demographic factors of age, gender, social class
    and ethnicity than psychiatric status
  • But recent Swedish study (Hodgins, 1992) those
    who develop serious mental disorder, or are
    intellectually handicapped are more likely to
    commit a crime than those not identified as
    disordered or handicapped.

40
Types of Mental Disorder and Crime
  • Affective disorders
  • Severe affective disorder
  • Disturbance of mood
  • Mild or severe/endogenous or reactive
  • Murder followed by suicide
  • Difficult to establish cause and effect
  • Violence as cathartic
  • Manic and Hypomanic Disorder
  • Outrageous, insightless and therefore potentially
    dangerous behaviour
  • Feelings of omnipotence
  • Wild ideas are considered practical
  • Memory is unimpaired rational arguments
  • Resist the idea that something wrong with them
  • Hostile and aggressive to those they think are
    obstructing them

41
Schizophrenic illness
  • Schizophrenia - disturbance of thought,
    perception, affect and motor behaviour
  • selected samples of offenders referred for
    psychiatric treatment - higher
  • Paranoid ideas and violence
  • Sosowsky (1978) - schizophrenics are slightly
    more likely to commit violent offences then
    other disordered groups or general population
  • Offending occurs during the prodromal phase and
    not in its florid form
  • Paranoid schizophrenia mostly implicated
  • Delusional jealousy Othello syndrome
  • Although the incidence of schizophrenic illness
    in relation to crime is low in may be of
    importance in particular cases e.g. bizarre crime.

42
CONT
  • The Neurosis
  • mild depression
  • anxiety states
  • hysterical states
  • obsessive/compulsive states
  • Mild depression
  • may be accompanied with confusion and
    absentmindedness
  • lead to shoplifting
  • Anxiety states
  • do not often account for criminality but
    individuals may feel so driven by their anxieties
    that they commit impulsive offence.
  • Hysterical states
  • of forensic importance
  • hysterical amnesia
  • fugues
  • Ganser syndrome
  • multiple personality disorder
  • Munchausen syndrome and Munchhuasen syndrome by
    Proxy

43
Mental Impairment
  • Severe impairment difficulty in understanding
    right from wrong
  • More easily caught
  • Used by others
  • Impairment may be related to organic disorder
  • Difficulty in making intentions known
  • Easily provoked
  • Sexuality lack of social skills
  • Vulnerable to changes in social environment

44
PSYCHOPATHY and ASPD
  • Not the same
  • Antisocial personality disorder is characterized
    by a lack of regard for the moral or legal
    standards in the local culture. There is a marked
    inability to get along with others or abide by
    societal rules. Individuals with this disorder
    are sometimes called psychopaths or sociopaths.
  • Diagnostic criteria for 301.7 Antisocial
    Personality Disorder  (cautionary statement)  
  • A. There is a pervasive pattern of disregard for
    and violation of the rights of others occurring
    since age 15 years, as indicated by three (or
    more) of the following 
  • (1) failure to conform to social norms with
    respect to lawful behaviors as indicated by
    repeatedly performing acts that are grounds for
    arrest (2) deceitfulness, as indicated by
    repeated lying, use of aliases, or conning others
    for personal profit or pleasure (3) impulsivity
    or failure to plan ahead (4) irritability and
    aggressiveness, as indicated by repeated physical
    fights or assaults (5) reckless disregard for
    safety of self or others (6) consistent
    irresponsibility, as indicated by repeated
    failure to sustain consistent work behavior or
    honor financial obligations (7) lack of remorse,
    as indicated by being indifferent to or
    rationalizing having hurt, mistreated, or stolen
    from another 
  • B. The individual is at least age 18 years. 
  • C. There is evidence of Conduct Disorder with
    onset before age 15 years. 
  • D. The occurrence of antisocial behavior is not
    exclusively during the course of Schizophrenia or
    a Manic Episode.

45
distinction
  • The distinction between psychopathy and ASPD is
    of considerable significance to the mental health
    and criminal justice systems. Unfortunately, it
    is a distinction that is often blurred, not only
    in the minds of many clinicians but in the latest
    edition of DSM-IV. (Hare, 1996)
  • Traditionally, affective and interpersonal traits
    such as egocentricity, deceit, shallow affect,
    manipulativeness, selfishness, and lack of
    empathy, guilt or remorse, have played a central
    role in the conceptualization and diagnosis of
    psychopathy (Cleckley Hare 1993 in press)
    Widiger and Corbitt). In 1980 this tradition was
    broken with the publication of DSM-III.
    Psychopathy- renamed antisocial personality
    disorder- was now defined by persistent
    violations of social norms, including lying,
    stealing, truancy, inconsistent work behavior and
    traffic arrests.

46
  • Among the reasons given for this dramatic shift
    away from the use of clinical inferences were
    that personality traits are difficult to measure
    reliably, and that it is easier to agree on the
    behaviors that typify a disorder than on the
    reasons why they occur. The result was a
    diagnostic category with good reliability but
    dubious validity, a category that lacked
    congruence with other, well-established
    conceptions of psychopathy. This "construct
    drift" was not intentional but rather the
    unforeseen result of reliance on a fixed set of
    behavioral indicators that simply did not provide
    adequate coverage of the construct they were
    designed to measure.
  • The problems with DSM-III and its 1987 revision
    (DSM-III-R) were widely discussed in the clinical
    and research literature (Widiger and Corbitt).
    Much of the debate concerned the absence of
    personality traits in the diagnosis of ASPD, an
    omission that allowed antisocial individuals with
    completely different personalities, attitudes and
    motivations to share the same diagnosis. At the
    same time, there was mounting evidence that the
    criteria for ASPD defined a disorder that was
    more artifactual than "real" (Livesley and
    Schroeder).

47
  • Psychopathy Checklist
  • Coincident with the publication of DSM-III in
    1980, Hare presented some preliminary findings on
    efforts to provide researchers with an
    operational definition of psychopathy in offender
    populations (Hare 1980). During the next decade
    those early efforts evolved into the Hare
    Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R) (Hare
    1991), a 20-item construct rating scale that uses
    a semi-structured interview, case-history
    information and specific diagnostic criteria for
    each item to provide a reliable and valid
    estimate of the degree to which an offender or
    forensic psychiatric patient matches the
    traditional (prototypical) conception of the
    psychopath (Fulero Stone). Each item is scored
    on a 3-point scale (0, 1, 2) according to the
    extent to which it applies to the individual. The
    total score can range from 0 to 40, with between
    15 percent and 20 percent of offenders receiving
    a score of at least 30, the cutoff for a research
    diagnosis of psychopathy. To put this into
    context, the mean scores for offenders in general
    and for noncriminals typically are around 22 and
    5, respectively.

48
  • A 12-item version of the PCL-R was developed for
    use in the MacArthur Foundation study on the
    prediction of violence in the mentally disordered
    (Hart et al 1994). Published in 1995 as the Hare
    Psychopathy Checklist Screening Version (PCLSV)
    by Hart and colleagues, it is highly correlated
    with the PCL-R and is used both to screen for
    psychopathy in forensic populations and as a
    stand-alone instrument for the assessment of
    psychopathy in noncriminal populations. The
    PCLSV formed the basis for the psychopathic
    personality disorder items used in the DSM-IV
    field trial for ASPD.

49
  • The items fall into two clusters One cluster,
    referred to as Factor 1, reflects core
    interpersonal and affective characteristics the
    other cluster, Factor 2, consists of items that
    reflect a socially deviant and nomadic lifestyle.

50
  • Most psychopaths (with the exception of those who
    somehow manage to plow their way through life
    without coming into formal or prolonged contact
    with the criminal justice system) meet the
    criteria for ASPD, but most individuals with ASPD
    are not psychopaths. Further, ASPD is very common
    in criminal populations, and those with the
    disorder are heterogeneous with respect to
    personality, attitudes and motivations for
    engaging in criminal behavior.
  • As a result, a diagnosis of ASPD has limited
    utility for making differential predictions of
    institutional adjustment, response to treatment,
    and behavior following release from prison. In
    contrast, a high PCL-R score depends as much on
    inferred personality traits as on antisocial
    behaviors, and when used alone or in conjunction
    with other variables has considerable predictive
    validity with respect to treatment outcome,
    institutional adjustment, recidivism and violence
    (Hare 1991 Harris and others Hart and Hare, in
    press).

51
  • For example, several studies have found that
    psychopathic offenders or forensic psychiatric
    patients (as defined by the PCL-R) are as much as
    three or four times more likely to violently
    reoffend following release from custody than are
    nonpsychopathic offenders or patients. ASPD, on
    the other hand, has relatively little predictive
    power, at least with forensic populations (Hart
    and Hare, in press).

52
  • The differences between psychopathy and ASPD are
    further highlighted by recent laboratory research
    involving the processing and use of linguistic
    and emotional information. Psychopaths differ
    dramatically from nonpsychopaths in their
    performance of a variety of cognitive and
    affective tasks. Compared with normal
    individuals, for example, psychopaths are less
    able to process or use the deep semantic meanings
    of language and to appreciate the emotional
    significance of events or experiences (Larbig and
    others Patrick Williamson and others).
  • It is worth noting that it is the interpersonal
    and affective components of psychopathy (as
    measured by PCL-R, Factor 1) that are most
    discriminating in these experiments. In sharp
    contrast, those with a diagnosis of ASPD (in
    which interpersonal and affective traits play
    little role) differ little from those without
    ASPD in their processing of linguistic and
    emotional material.

53
Psychopathy ChecklistRevised
  • -The Psychopathy ChecklistRevised (PCL-R Hare,
    1991, 2003), in particular, has high predictive
    validity with respect to both general and violent
    recidivism (see, e.g., Hemphill, Hare, Wong,
  • -The Psychopathy Checklist Youth Version
    (PCLYV Forth, Kosson, Hare, 2003) was
    designed to assess psychopathic traits in youth
    that are considered to be
  • Associated with adolescent risk and treatment
    amenability

54
cont
  • -MOST PSYCHOPATHS ARE ANTISOCIAL PERSONALITIES
    BUT NOT ALL ANTISOCIAL PERSONALITIES ARE
    PSYCHOPATHS.
  • - This is because APD is defined mainly by
    behaviors (Factor 2 antisocial behaviors) and
    doesn't tap the affective/interpersonal
    dimensions (Factor 1 core psychopathic features,
    narcissism) of psychopathy.
  • - Further, criminals and APDs tend to "age out"
    of crime psychopaths do not, and are at high
    risk of recidivism.

55
PCL-R 20-item
  •     Hare's checklist is based on Cleckley's
    16-item checklist, and the following is a
    discussion of the concepts in the PCL-R
  • 1. GLIB and SUPERFICIAL CHARM
  • 2. GRANDIOSE SELF-WORTH
  • 3. NEED FOR STIMULATION or PRONENESS TO BOREDOM
  • 4. PATHOLOGICAL LYING
  • 5. CONNING AND MANIPULATIVENESS
  • 6. LACK OF REMORSE OR GUILT
  • 7. SHALLOW AFFECT
  • 8. CALLOUSNESS and LACK OF EMPATHY
  • 9. PARASITIC LIFESTYLE
  • 10. POOR BEHAVIORAL CONTROLS
  • 11. PROMISCUOUS SEXUAL BEHAVIOR
  • 12. EARLY BEHAVIOR PROBLEMS
  • 13. LACK OF REALISTIC, LONG-TERM GOALS
  • 14. IMPULSIVITY
  • 15. IRRESPONSIBILITY
  • 16. FAILURE TO ACCEPT RESPONSIBILITY FOR OWN
    ACTIONS
  • 17. MANY SHORT-TERM MARITAL RELATIONSHIPS
  • 18. JUVENILE DELINQUENCY

56
CRITIQUE
  • Sociologists see psychiatry and law as
    alternative systems for controlling the socially
    deviant (Foucault, 1978)
  • Concerns about the psychiatrisation of crime
    and the crminalisation of mental disorder
  • Medical model remains the dominant paradigm
  • Critique
  • Fails to meet some ideal of health
  • No sharp boundaries between normality or
    abnormality
  • Szasz (1960) objects to the determinism of the
    disease concept
  • Sufferer as a passive object
  • Issues of professional power and the control of
    care delivery services
  • Popular notion that criminals are sick
  • Psychological interventions in antisocial
    behaviour implicitly follow a medical analogy in
    so far as the temporary application of treatment
    is expected to lead to cure
  • Sociological criticism of individualism
  • Attack on rehabilitation

57
CRIMINAL NON RESPONSIBILITY
  • Mental illness is a global qualitative alteration
    of psychic functions and of a persons entire
    ability to relate to his environment
  • A mentally ill person lives is a system of
    interactions with other persons and the world
    whose meanings have been totally altered as a
    result of the illness
  • This alteration is not within the control of
    mentally ill patient
  • Eg the psychosocially disturbed schizophrenic is
    without responsibility and without criminal guilt
    for his social conduct
  • This is the logical deduction of criminal non
    responsibility
  • Adapted from Krober and Lau (2000)

58
(No Transcript)
59
SEXUAL BEHAVIOUR AND MISBEHAVIOUR
  • Relative normality vs. deviance
  • Morality
  • Religion proscription
  • Emotive
  • stereotyping
  • 4 points (Prins, 1980) Sexual standards
  • statistical
  • cultural
  • religious
  • subjective
  • Not all sexual deviations constitute criminal
    behaviour and not all sexual offences are sexual
    deviations
  • Emotive topic
  • Changes in attitudes towards women
  • Changes in reference to sexual behaviour and
    misbehaviour

60
  • ELEMENTS OF SEXUAL BEHAVIOUR
  • Sexual behaviour has four elements
  • True for normal or deviant sexual behaviour
  • fantasy
  • Symbolism fethishes and partialisms
  • ritualism
  • compulsion
  • Combining the elements indicative that the sex
    involved is not typical of normal sexual
    functioning
  • An individual is sexual only when a certain
    fetish or partialism is sent
  • Compulsivity is so overwhelming that emotions and
    caring for the partner are missing
  • Certain scripts must be followed, and any
    deviation from them is fatal to sexual
    functioning
  • Fantasies center on the dehumanization, torture,
    and/or murder of hapless and helpless victims

61
THEORIES OF SEXUAL DEVIANCE
  • The subjects and offences covered under the
    rubric of sexual offences is wide and varied
  • In order to begin to understand the basic reasons
    or theoretical underpinnings of why sex
    offenders, as an aggregate class, behave the way
    they do, we have to take a broad look at sexual
    offenders and their motivations
  • Four prevailing approaches

62
Biological perspectives
  • Popular belief sexually deviant behaviour
    reflects a high sex drive
  • some components of arousal and orgasm are
    controlled by hormones
  • but sexual arousal, sexual performance and gender
    identity are highly dependent on learning and
    situational factors
  • Quinsey (1984) animal studies suggest a close
    link between neural centres for aggression and
    sexual activity
  • Sexual violence may be the result of genetic
    advantage of forced mating in evolutionary
    history
  • Marshall and Barbaree (1990) natural propensity
    for sexual aggression in males
  • Constitutional theories of crime Lombroso,
    Sheldon, genetic theories etc

63
Psychodynamic concepts
  • Freud
  • Freud sexual deviations serve a defensive
    function of avoiding castration anxiety
  • Unresolved oedipal conflicts and regression to
    earlier fixation points
  • Failure to identify with father dominance of
    mother
  • E.g. homosexual pedophilia inverted narcissism
  • Rapists ambivalence towards mother
  • Sexual sadism degradation of a woman implies a
    reaction formation against incestuous wishes
  • Recent accounts ego functions and interpersonal
    goals
  • Groth and Burgess (1977) emhasise non sexual
    motives e.g. rape function of anger and need for
    power and control
  • Symbolic revenge

64
Learning Theories
  • Most popular and researched
  • Classical conditioning - The attachment of sexual
    arousal to inappropriate stimuli and failure to
    acquire heterosocial skills
  • S-r mediation
  • Initial arousing experience supplies fantasy for
    masturbation particular cues achieve a sexual
    valence trough being parried with sexual arousal
    and orgasm.
  • Deficiencies in social skills negative
    reinforcement of deviant attractions less
    anxiety provoking reinforced if not punished
  • Inds learn criminal acts and acquire motivation
    to commit crime from those around them
  • Acquisition, instigation and maintenance

65
Sociocultural theories
  • Wide cross cultural variability in the prevalence
    of forcible sex and sex between adults and
    children
  • Focus on rape
  • Expression of the power relationships between men
    and women (Brownmiller, 1975)

66
Sex crimes
  • Sex crimes are forms of human sexual behavior
    that are crimes. Someone who commits one is said
    to be a sex offender. Some sex crimes are crimes
    of violence that involve sex. Others are
    violations of social taboos, such as incest,
    indecent exposure or exhibitionism. There is much
    variation among cultures as to what is considered
    a crime or not, and in what ways or to what
    extent crimes are punished.
  • Western cultures are often far more tolerant of
    acts, such as oral sex or cross-dressing, that
    have traditionally been held to be crimes in some
    other cultures, but combine this with lesser
    tolerance for the remaining crimes. By contrast,
    many cultures with a strong religious tradition
    consider a far broader range of activities to be
    serious crimes.
  • As a general rule, the law in many countries
    often intervenes in sexual activity involving
    young or adolescent children below the legal age
    of consent, nonconsensual deliberate displays or
    illicit watching of sexual activity, sex with
    close relatives ("incest"), harm to animals, acts
    involving the deceased, and also when there is
    harassment, nuisance, fear, injury, or assault of
    a sexual nature, or serious risk of abuse of
    certain professional relationships.
  • Separately, it also usually regulates or controls
    the censorship of pornographic or obscene
    material.

67
Common sex crimes
  • The activities listed below often carry a
    condition of illegality if acted upon, though
    they may usually be legally role played between
    consenting partners
  • Rape, lust murder and other forms of sexual
    assault and sexual abuse
  • Child sexual abuse
  • Statutory rape
  • Frotteurism sexual arousal through rubbing one's
    self against a non-consenting stranger in public
  • Exhibitionism and voyeurism, if deliberate and
    non-consensual, called "indecent exposure" and
    "peeping tom" respectively in this context.
  • Incest between close relatives - laws on what is
    permitted and not permitted vary widely.
  • Telephone scatologia being sexually aroused by
    making obscene telephone calls
  • Sex with animals
  • Sexual harassment
  • Sexual acts by people in a position of trust
    (such as teachers, doctors and police officers),
    towards any person they are involved with
    professionally.
  • Extra-maritial relations are illegal in many
    places. In Islamic law, it is illegal under the
    term Zina.
  • A variety of laws protect children by making
    various acts with children a sex crime. These can
    include Age of Consent laws, laws preventing the
    exposure of children to pornography, laws making
    it a crime for a child to be involved in (or
    exposed to) certain sexual behaviors, and laws
    against child grooming and the production and
    ownership of child pornography (including
    simulated images).
  • Non-consensual sadomasochistic acts may legally
    constitute assault, and therefore belong in this
    list. In addition, some jurisdictions criminalize
    some or all sadomasochistic acts, regardless of
    legal consent and impose liability for any
    injuries caused.

68
CONT
  • Acts which may be regarded as crimes in some
    areas
  • Many consensual sexual actions or activities
    which are widely permitted (or not criminalized)
    in one place, may none the less be viewed as
    crimes (often of a serious nature) in other
    places.
  • The clearest example of this is homosexuality
    which varies from being legally protected and
    capable of marriage in some countries, through
    to obtaining the death penalty in others. Other
    examples include
  • Adultery
  • Anal sex
  • Masturbation
  • Nudity/Streaking
  • Oral sex
  • Various Paraphilias/Fetishes (Sexual) such as
    transvestitism
  • Pornography
  • Prostitution and/or pimping
  • Ownership of sex toys
  • Public urination
  • Stealing underwear - Although stealing is always
    a crime, men's stealing of women's underwear or
    vice-versa is sometimes regarded as more serious
    than stealing same-sex underwear.

69
(Perkins, 1991) CLINICAL CLASSIFICATION
  • compensatory
  • displaced aggression
  • sadistic
  • impulsive/opportunistic

70
PSYCHIATRIC CLASSIFICATION
  • the paraphilias (handout)
  • an erotosexual condition in which a person is
    recurrently responsive to , and obsessively
    dependent on an unusual or unacceptable stimulus,
    perception or fantasy
  • stimulus s necessary to initiate or maintain
    erotic arousal and t achieve orgasm
  • involve a segment of the preparatory stage
    (Money and Werlas 1982)
  • a time frame of at least 6 months (DSM IIIR)

71
  • These mental disorders are characterized by
    sexual fantasies, urges, or behaviors involving
    non-human objects (coprophilia, Fetishism,
    Transvestic Fetishism), suffering or humiliation
    (Sexual Sadism, Masochism), children (Pedophilia)
    or other non-consenting person (Voyeurism,
    Frotteurism, Exhibitionism).

72
coprophilia
  • Love of feces in psychoanalytic theory is
    associated with anal eroticism and symbolized by
    love of valuables. 

73
Fetishism
  • This paraphilia is characterized by sexual
    fantasies, urges, or behaviors involving use of
    non-human objects to produce or enhance sexual
    arousal with or in the absence of a partner.
  • A. Over a period of at least 6 months, recurrent,
    intense sexually arousing fantasies, sexual
    urges, or behaviors involving the use of
    nonliving objects (e.g., female
    undergarments). B. The fantasies, sexual urges,
    or behaviors cause clinically significant
    distress or impairment in social, occupational,
    or other important areas of functioning. C. The
    fetish objects are not limited to articles of
    female clothing used in cross-dressing (as in
    Transvestic Fetishism) or devices designed for
    the purpose of tactile genital stimulation (e.g.,
    a vibrator).

74
Transvestic Fetishism
  • Heterosexual males with this paraphilia dress in
    female clothes (cross-dress) to produce or
    enhance sexual arousal, usually without a real
    partner, but with the fantasy that they are the
    female partner as well.
  • A. Over a period of at least 6 months, in a
    heterosexual male, recurrent, intense sexually
    arousing fantasies, sexual urges, or behaviors
    involving cross-dressing. B. The fantasies,
    sexual urges, or behaviors cause clinically
    significant distress or impairment in social,
    occupational, or other important areas of
    functioning. Specify if With Gender Dysphoria
    if the person has persistent discomfort with
    gender role or identity

75
Sexual Sadism
  • Individuals with this Paraphilia use sexual
    fantasies, urges, or behaviors involving
    infliction of pain, suffering or humiliation to
    enhance or achieve sexual excitement.
  • A. Over a period of at least 6 months, recurrent,
    intense sexually arousing fantasies, sexual
    urges, or behaviors involving acts (real, not
    simulated) in which the psychological or physical
    suffering (including humiliation) of the victim
    is sexually exciting to the person. B. The person
    has acted on these urges with a nonconsenting
    person, or the sexual urges or fantasies cause
    marked distress or interpersonal difficulty.

76
Sexual Masochism
  • Individuals with this paraphilia use sexual
    fantasies, urges, or behaviors involving being
    beaten, humiliated, bound or tortured to enhance
    or achieve sexual excitement.
  • A. Over a period of at least 6 months, recurrent,
    intense sexually arousing fantasies, sexual
    urges, or behaviors involving the act (real, not
    simulated) of being humiliated, beaten, bound, or
    otherwise made to suffer. B. The fantasies,
    sexual urges, or behaviors cause clinically
    significant distress or impairment in social,
    occupational, or other important areas of
    functioning.

77
Pedophilia
  • This Paraphilia is characterized by sexual
    activity with a child, usually age 13 or younger,
    or in the case of an adolescent,  a child 5 years
    younger than the pedophile.
  •  
  • A. Over a period of at least 6 months, recurrent,
    intense sexually arousing fantasies, sexual
    urges, or behaviors involving sexual activity
    with a prepubescent child or children (generally
    age 13 years or younger). B. The person has acted
    on these urges, or the sexual urges or fantasies
    cause marked distress or interpersonal
    difficulty.C. The person is at least age 16 years
    and at least 5 years older than the child or
    children in Criterion A. Note Do not include an
    individual in late adolescence involved in an
    ongoing sexual relationship with a 12- or
    13-year-old. Specify if Sexually Attracted to
    Males Sexually Attracted to Females Sexually
    Attracted to Both Specify ifLimited to
    Incest Specify type Exclusive Type (attracted
    only to children) Nonexclusive Type

78
Voyeurism
  • This Paraphilia is characterized by sexual
    fantasies, urges, or behaviors involving
    observing an unknowing and non-consenting person,
    usually unclothed and/or engaged in sexual
    activity, to produce sexual excitement.
  •  
  • A. Over a period of at least 6 months, recurrent,
    intense sexually arousing fantasies, sexual
    urges, or behaviors involving the act of
    observing an unsuspecting person who is naked, in
    the process of disrobing, or engaging in sexual
    activity. B. The person has acted on these urges,
    or the sexual urges or fantasies cause marked
    distress or interpersonal difficulty.

79
Frotteurism
  • This Paraphilia is characterized by sexual
    fantasies, urges, or behaviors involving touching
    or rubbing one's genitals against the body of a
    non-consenting person.
  • Also frottage
  • A. Over a period of at least 6 months, recurrent,
    intense sexually arousing fantasies, sexual
    urges, or behaviors involving touching and
    rubbing against a non-consenting person. B. The
    person has acted on these urges, or the sexual
    urges or fantasies cause marked distress or
    interpersonal difficulty.

80
Exhibitionism
  • This Paraphilia is characterized by sexual
    fantasies, urges, or behaviors involving surprise
    exposure of the individual's genitals to a
    stranger.
  • A. Over a period of at least 6 months, recurrent,
    intense sexually arousing fantasies, sexual
    urges, or behaviors involving the exposure of
    one's genitals to an unsuspecting stranger. B.
    The person has acted on these urges, or the
    sexual urges or fantasies cause marked distress
    or interpersonal difficulty.

81
PREVALANCE?
  • Constitute a small proportion of all crimes
  • Discrepancy between actual offences committed,
    numbers known to the police and numbers
    prosecuted
  • Most sexual offences are committed by males
  • Prevalence of women on the increase

82
SEXUAL OFFENCES Indecent exposure
  • Commonest
  • Exclusively male offence
  • Victims adult females or children of either sex
  • Behaviour and personality types (Prins,1980)
  • Inhibited struggles against impulses to expose
    himself. Placid penis and anxiety guilt. Form
    of love making at a distance. Sex education and
    counseling
  • Situational exposure. Marital or other stress.
    Counseling.
  • Less inhibited type erect penis and
    masturbation. Intervention may prevent
    progression
  • exposure occurring with mental illness medical
    intervention
  • Mentally impaired. Lack of social skills and need
    for sexual expression. Counseling and social
    skills training.
  • exposure facilitated by substance abuse
  • true exhibitionists sole means of obtaining
    release
  • Neurotic exhibitionist compulsion medication.

83
Additional explanations
  • need to assert a wavering or undeveloped
    masculinity
  • need to assert power over women
  • suppressed desire to commit rape

84
Scoptophlia (voyeurism)
  • sexual arousal by looking at private or intimate
    scenes
  • learns from experience and looks for scenes that
    he can easily invade
  • Dangers are that scoptophiliac will attempt to
    meet the victim of communicate with her
  • courtship disordered interferes with normal
    courtship functions (Seto and Kuban, 1996)
  • after the act will move to a place where he can
    masturbate
  • dynamics involved do not seem to be severe enough
    to result in a violent sex offender
  • Traits of scoptophiliacs
  • sexually immature
  • sexually frustrated
  • poor relationship with father
  • overprotective mother
  • childhood sexual trauma
  • poor social /sexual skills
  • low self esteem and high self criticism
  • young and chronic masturbator

85
Sexual Assaults on Children
  • physical and emotional trauma considerable
  • distinguish between homosexual/heterosexual,
    young/adult offenders
  • classification (Knight et al, 1989)
  • type1. interpersonal
  • type 2. narcissistic
  • type 3. exploitative, non sadistic
  • type 4. muted sadistic behaviour
  • type 5. non sadistic aggressive
  • type 6. sadistic

86
Extent of child sexual abuse
  • Ellis and Aranbanel (1973265) 24 of the
    female subjects had sexual contact before
    adolescence
  • OBrien and Goldstein (1988) 20 of all children,
    regardless of gender experienced some form of
    sexual abuse before their eighteenth birthday
  • Briere (1989) sample of 193 male undergrads
  • 21 reported sexual attraction
  • 9 described sexual fantasies
  • 5 admitted masturbating to such fantasies
  • 7 indicated likelihood of having sex with a
    child if unlikely to be caught
  • Still numbers irrelevant
  • physical and emotional trauma considerable
  • distinguish between homosexual/heterosexual,
    young/adult offenders

87
Effects of childhood sexual abuse
  • Browne and Finkelhor (1986)
  • short term effects include fear, depression,
    anger, hostility, aggression, and inappropriate
    sexual behaviour
  • marked short term effects for 1 in 5
  • long term effects include depression, self
    destructive behaviour, anxiety, feelings of
    isolation, sexual maladjustment, self esteem,
    substance abuse
  • Effects are more marked if
  • Longer lasting experiences
  • more incidents
  • genital contact
  • force
  • adult male offender
  • father figure

88
Victim gender differences
  • Boys and men
  • threaten masculine invulnerability, creating
    additional barriers to admitting either
    victimisation or harm, and possibly contributing
    to a stronger tendency to gravitate to the
    perpetrator role
  • Hepburn 1994, Mendel 1995
  • Girls
  • Sexual abuse seen as an early lesson in
    subordination for girls, confirming gender
    identity (Russell, 1986)
  • Victim stance orientation
  • Levesque (1994) girls experienced more physical
    injury, more force and threats and more likely to
    resist.
  • There is no evidence to support a specific
    syndrome or single traumatic process which is a
    consequence of abuse Kendall - Tackett et al 1995

89
Meaning impact and coping with childhood sexual
abuse
  • Kelly Burton Regan 1998
  • The earlier the abuse began in childhood, the
    more complex the levels of impact and
    consequences were, since young children had fewer
    resources to cope with, and make sense of, what
    was happening to them
  • The most common coping strategies used at the
    time and over time were forms of
    disassociation Splitting of the mind and
    body at the time of the assaults, creating a safe
    fantasy world and/ or imaginary friends, and
    forgetting incidents or even whole periods of
    life

90
TYPES OF PEDOPHILES
  • Differ in preferred age or gender
  • Sexual preference does not reflect adult sexual
    orientation
  • The Mysoped
  • Specifically want to harm their victims
    physically
  • Sexual AROUSAL EQUATED WITH FATAL VIOLENCE
  • Child stranger
  • Stalk and abduct rather than seduce
  • Often mutilates body and necrophilia
  • Terrorises child
  • Crime premeditated and ritualised
  • Low degree of contact with children outside
    offences
  • Low in social competence
  • Sadists more likely to use weapon
  • Removed from homes as children
  • Violent in relationship with others
  • Other violent and non violence non sexual
    offences
  • History of substance abuse

91
  • The regressed child offender
  • Historically involved with adults in normal
    sexual rels
  • Precipitating cause situation or occurrence in
    life
  • Prefers children he does not know
  • Prefers females
  • Amenable to treatment
  • Better adjusted, intact home
  • Least likely to be a recividivist

92
  • Fixated offender
  • Fixated at an earlier stage of development
  • No precipitating cause interest in children is
    persistent continual and compulsive
  • Prefers males
  • Little activity with age mates, prefers company
    of children, uncomfortable with adults
  • Lifestyle and behaviour is childish
  • Finds children to be less critical
  • Loves children and not interested in harming them
  • Courts and seduces a child slowly becomes
    physically intimate
  • Naïve offender
  • Do not understand the true nature of their
    offences or the societal rules prohibiting sexual
    involvement with children
  • Unable to appreciate the impact of what they have
    done

93
Etiology
  • Salter (1989) number of predisposing factors
  • Deviant arousal patterns
  • Acting out responses to non sexual problems
  • Home with domineering mothers ad passive or
    missing fathers
  • Low self esteem and poor coping skills
  • Childhood sexual abuse
  • Traits of pedophiles
  • Most pedophiles are men
  • Low self esteem
  • Heightened arousal to children
  • Challenged social skills
  • Criminal records
  • Feelings of remorse
  • Multiple sexual victims

94
Management
  • not cure
  • helping offenders make more successful
    adjustments to their lives
  • multi method approach
  • break behaviour down into manageable segments and
    typologies
  • denial
  • segregation in prison

95
INCEST
  • most emotive reaction
  • incestuous families background of social and
    emotional disorder, mental impairment, alcohol
    abuse, family composition and lifestyle

96
  • Any use of a minor child to meet the sexual or
    sexual/emotional needs of one or more persons
    whose authority is derived through ongoing
    bonding with that child (Blume, 1987)

97
Etiology of the incestuous offender
  • common motivational factor is that the male
    partner retaliating against the female for actual
    or imagined unfaithfulness
  • men may feel that children are their sexual
    property
  • lack of impulse control
  • confusion of roles whereby the child becomes an
    object for the needs of the adult without the
    ability to meet those needs.
  • Crosses generations
  • Symptom of a multi problem based family
  • the family is socially isolated
  • the male caretaker has a high level of control
    within the family
  • the family has a high emphasis on moral and
    religious issues
  • highly distressed relationship between parents or
    caretakers
  • parents record substantial sexual discord
  • incestuous families background of social and
    emotional disorder, mental impairment, alcohol
    abuse, family composition and lifestyle

98
  • management
  • adverse family attitudes and living conditions
    call for social and other intervention rather
    than punitive wrath
  • supervision of younger members of the family and
    effect removal if behaviour escalates
  • restore family functioning not destroy it further
  • prison exacerbates the problem

99
RAPE
  • Rape is a cri
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