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Manifest madness: mental incapacity in criminal law

Part of the Oxford Monographs on Criminal Law and Justice series
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This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 International licence.

It is free to read at Oxford Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations. Whether it is a question of the age below which a child cannot be held liable for their actions, or the attribution of responsibility to defendants with mental illnesses, mental incapacity is a central concern for legal actors, policy makers, and legislators when it comes to crime and justice. Understanding mental incapacity in criminal law is notoriously difficult; it involves tracing overlapping and interlocking legal doctrines, current and past practices of evidence and proof, and also medical and social understandings of mental illness and incapacity.

With its focus on the complex interaction of legal doctrines and practices relating to mental incapacity and knowledge - both expert and non-expert - of it, this book offers a fresh perspective on this topic.

Bringing togetherpreviously disparate discussions on mental incapacity from law, psychology, and philosophy, this book provides a close study of this terrain of criminal law, analysing the development of mental incapacity doctrines through historical cases to the modern era.

It maps the shifting boundaries aroundabnormality as constructed in law, arguing that the mental incapacity terrain has a distinct character - 'manifest madness'.

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Product Details
Oxford University Press
0191627542 / 9780191627545
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
19/04/2012
English
282 pages
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