Fr. 146.00

Neurolaw - Advances in Neuroscience, Justice & Security

English · Hardback

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Description

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This edited book provides an in-depth examination of the implications of neuroscience for the criminal justice system. It draws together experts from across law, neuroscience, medicine, psychology, criminology, and ethics, and offers an important contribution to current debates at the intersection of these fields. It examines how neuroscience might contribute to fair and more effective criminal justice systems, and how neuroscientific insights and information can be integrated into criminal law in a way that respects fundamental rights and moral values.
The book's first part approaches these questions from a legal perspective, followed by ethical accounts in part two. Its authors address a wide range of topics and approaches: some more theoretical, like those regarding the foundations of punishment; others are more practical, like those concerning the use of brain scans in the courtroom. Together, they illustrate the thoroughly interdisciplinary nature of the debate, in which science, law and ethics are closely intertwined. It will appeal in particular to students and scholars of law, neuroscience, criminology, socio-legal studies and philosophy.
Chapter 8 is available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License via link.springer.com.

List of contents

1. Possibilities and limitations of neuroscience in the legal process.- 2. euroscience and dangerousness evaluations: The effect of neuroscience evidence on Judges. Findings from a focus group study.- 3. The need for a partial defence of diminished capacity, and the potential role of the cognitive sciences in helping frame that defence.- 4. Coercion and control and excusing murder?.- 5. Reading the sleeping mind: Empirical and legal considerations.- 6. 'Brain-reading' in criminal justice and forensic psychiatry: Towards an integrative legal-ethical approach.- 7. A biopsychosocial approach to idiopathic versus acquired pedophilia: what do we know and how do we proceed legally and ethically?.- 8. Three rationales for a legal right to mental integrity.- 9. Neurointerventions and crime prevention: On ideal and non-ideal considerations.- 10. Neuroscience and the moral enhancement of offenders: The exceptionally good 'brain' as a thought experiment.- 11. Retributivism, consequentialism, and the role of science. 

About the author










Sjors Ligthart is PhD candidate in Criminal Law at Tilburg University, the Netherlands.



Dave van Toor is Assistant Professor of Criminal Law at Utrecht University, the Netherlands.


Tijs Kooijmans is Professor of Criminal Law at Tilburg University, the Netherlands.


Thomas Douglas is Professor of Applied Philosophy and Director of Research and Development at the Oxford Uehiro Centre of Practical Ethics, Faculty of Philosophy, and Senior Research Fellow at Jesus College, University of Oxford, UK.


Gerben Meynen is Professor of Forensic Psychiatry at Utrecht University and Professor of Ethics and Psychiatry at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, the Netherlands.




Product details

Assisted by Thomas Douglas (Editor), Tijs Kooijmans (Editor), Tijs Kooijmans et al (Editor), Sjors Ligthart (Editor), Gerben Meynen (Editor), Dave van Toor (Editor), Dav van Toor (Editor), Dave van Toor (Editor)
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 11.07.2021
 
EAN 9783030692766
ISBN 978-3-0-3069276-6
No. of pages 278
Dimensions 148 mm x 21 mm x 210 mm
Illustrations XVII, 278 p.
Series Palgrave Studies in Law, Neuroscience, and Human Behavior
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Psychology > Applied psychology
Non-fiction book > Psychology, esoterics, spirituality, anthroposophy > Applied psychology

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