Chapter 9 Whydunnit?
Causal Explanations in Sentencing Offenders With Mental Health Problems
Download Url(s)
https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/85203/1/9781003350644_10.4324_9781003350644-12.pdfAuthor(s)
Walvisch, Jamie
Carroll, Andrew
Marsh, Tim
Sarkar, Jaydip
Language
EnglishAbstract
Emeritus Professor McSherry has written extensively on the intersection between criminal law and mental health. The concept of ‘causation’ is central to the way the law deals with mentally disordered offenders: the ‘insanity’ defence requires a causal connection between the offender’s psychopathology and the offence; and mitigation at sentencing frequently relies on proof of a causal link. While ‘causation’ is a commonly used term, there is significant variation in the way that different disciplines understand its meaning. This is problematic, as explanations for offending that are proffered to the courts by mental health experts must function within a legal epistemological framework if they are to carry weight. This chapter considers how Australian, English and Welsh sentencing courts currently assess the causal relationship between mental disorders and offending, and the challenges that arise when sentencing courts rely on evidence from mental health experts. It draws on Nigel Walker’s notion of ‘possibility’ explanations to present a framework for experts to provide robust explanations for offending that provide defensible opinions on the nature and strength of the causal relationship. It also considers the roles that legal practitioners and the courts should play in assessing the causal issue.
Keywords
Bernadette McSherry, Coercion, Courts, Criminal Law, Disability, Future, Law Reform, Mental Health Law, Restrictive Practices, Risk and Risk Assessment, Seclusion and Restraint, Sentencing, TechnologyISBN
9781032396071, 9781032396323Publisher
Taylor & FrancisPublisher website
http://www.taylorandfrancis.com/Publication date and place
2024Grantor
Imprint
RoutledgeClassification
Jurisprudence and general issues
Public health and safety law
Medical and healthcare law
Mental health law
Medical specialties, branches of medicine