The interface between general and forensic psychiatry: A historical perspective

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Abstract

Mental disorder and criminality are separate entities but some people with a mental disorder commit criminal offences and some criminals have a mental disorder. Before 1800 there was no separate category of mentally disordered offenders (referred to as criminal lunatics until 1948) in UK legislation. The provision of facilities for mentally disordered offenders in Britain and Ireland overlapped with, but was also separate from, provision for the mentally ill generally. The interface between general and forensic psychiatry is an area of tension and of collaboration. To understand how contemporary general and forensic psychiatry interact, it is useful to have an understanding of how factors have evolved over time.

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APA

Gordon, H., & Khosla, V. (2014, September 1). The interface between general and forensic psychiatry: A historical perspective. Advances in Psychiatric Treatment. Royal College of Psychiatrists. https://doi.org/10.1192/apt.bp.113.011999

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