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Crime in mind: introduction to psychology and criminology Professor Gwen Adshead June 2016 Who or what is a criminal? • Do you commit crimes because you are criminal? • Or do you become a criminal when you commit a crime? • What is a crime anyway? • Who gets to decide? 2 Laws create groups • Early groups of humans make laws to regulate relationships between people in groups • Breach of rules leads to expulsion from the group • Anything or anyone that causes harm to the group is an offender • Trials of objects and animals in mediaeval times 3 Identification with sin • Moral offenders breach moral rules • People who breach rules are bad people • Bad people are not like us good people (obviously) • Identifying, marking and excluding bad people is a an important process • Also need to have process: trials and hearings 4 Getting confessions is hard 5 Detection is hard too… 6 A prisoner at court 7 Criminological theories • Classical: the law creates crime, and those who break the law are criminals • Sociological: the environment creates the contexts in which people break the law: poverty, poor housing and lack of space • Positivist/individual: there is something in the offender that makes them want to break the law 8 Innate degeneracy • Criminals are born different • With innate vulnerabilities that make them more likely to break the law • Skull size ( Lombroso, Berthillon) • Brain size • Body shape • Genes…..( Ferri, Garofalo, contemporary…) 9 Cesare Lombroso 1835-1909 10 Skulls of criminals 11 Individual psychology • 19C attention to individual psychology and self –experience • William James in the USA, Sigmund Freud in Europe • A medical model of mind • The deviant behaviour is a ‘symptom’ of an underlying defect or dysfunction • E.g Criminals from a sense of guilt ( 1912) 12 John Bowlby (1944) • A study of juvenile thieves • All had suffered maternal deprivation, compared to a group of similar boys who were not thieves • An early study that combined environmental influence with individual psychology • Lack of care led boys to feel deprived; and the stealing was a response to the sense of loss 13 Nuremburg trials 14 Post war studies of deviant behaviour • Conservative norms and values as part of post-war adjustment to peace • Explanations for human cruelty and deviance located in individual psychology • Supports argument for individual responsibility and culpability • The criminal as ‘other’ to the norm 15 Hervey Cleckley 1941 16 The Mask of Sanity • A series of case studies of people who break social rules • Who are profoundly antisocial and who do not seem to care about how others feel • Do not seem to learn from experience or feel concern about how others see them • The ‘psychopath’: one who has no emotional depth to their personality • ‘They know the words but not the music’ 17 Eysenck 1964 • Studies of personality traits • Four major dimensions to personality • Extraversion (E: sensation seeking); Neuroticism ( N: emotionality); • Conscientiousness and Openness to experience • Psychoticism (P) not substantiated ( yet…) • Criminals high in E and N 18 An influential theory • An inter-actionist approach • Involving genetic and physiological explanations • And acknowledging environmental influence • Anticipating current epigenetic studies i.e. individuals with genetic vulnerabilities may be exposed to environmental stressors that makes rule breaking more likely 19 Yochelson & Samenow 1976 • A study of ‘the criminal personality’ • Beginning in the 1970s • Interviews with 255 people who had committed crimes • A psychoanalytic approach which shifted to a more cognitive approach i.e. from unconscious meaning to conscious thinking styles 20 The criminal personality Restless, dissatisfied and irritable While at school, considered requests from their teachers and parents as impositions Continually set themselves apart from others Want to live life of excitement, at any cost Are habitually angry Are lacking empathy Feel under no obligation to anyone or anything except their own interests Are poor at responsible decision-making, having prejudged situations. The birth of criminal psychology • People who commit crimes show persistent cognitive errors and distortions that make crime more likely • They seem to be more impulsive and not care about consequences • Other risk factors can exacerbate cognitive distortions and impulsivity e.g. substance misuse, social isolation 22 But… • Studies rest on self-report studies of personality ; and on detected criminals! • Bias in terms of which criminals studied: emphasis on juvenile delinquents who change • Not all crime is the same! Persistent theft and robbery is a different sort of crime to white collar fraud • Similar and different processes • The criminal still seen as ‘other’: no connection to the social group 23 A different approach • Criminological theories of mind • Sykes and Matza’s studies of juvenile delinquents • Observations: these young people did express guilt, and also expressed admiration of others who were law abiding • They had views about who was a legitimate victim and who was not; they recognised legal and moral norms 24 Neutralisation techniques • In order to commit a crime, young offenders have to convince themselves of the following: • It wasn’t my fault • They aren’t really harmed by what I did • They had it coming • You were just as bad in your day (everyone does this) • I had to stick with my friends 25 Hirschi: what makes people keep the law? • The importance of self control • Six elements: impulsivity, a preference for simple tasks, favouring of physical over mental activities, self-centeredness, and a temper component. • Developed in childhood • Low self-control plus criminal opportunity makes crime more likely 26 A different approach to offenders • Studying what they say about themselves in their own words • Tony Parker’s studies of life sentenced prisoners and sex offenders • Studies of how offenders talk about their offences; how they see themselves • The Narrative turn in the psychology of offending 27 Maruna (2001) • Most young offender do give up by late twenties • Only a minority persist • What makes young offenders give up offending? • Those who desist describe a sense of agency; an ability to effect change in themselves • The story of myself 28 Supreme Court Jan 2011 Violence is not a term of Art. It is capable of bearing many meanings and applying to many different types of behaviour 29 Types of crime in E&W 30 The psychology of violence • Who are the offenders we are most concerned about? • The most persistent? Or the most dangerous? • Not the same! • Lots of rule breakers out there; but the risk of mainly related to property threat • What about the 20% of offenders who commit acts of violence? 31 Commonest recorded violence: assaults by young men on other men assaults by men on partners physical abuse of children Interpersonal Most violence takes place in context of relationships 32 Homicide victims in E&W by sex 33 Risk factors for violence Socio-cultural factors: being young and male; cultural norms about use of violence social isolation Paranoid mental states Substance misuse Poor reality testing Hypervigilance Insecure attachment and relational disturbance? 34 Absence of mentalising • Mentalising: perceiving and appraising the intentions of others • Keeping mind in mind • Deficits in mentalising in those who commit antisocial actions: – What I think is reality and the only reality – Only the physical is real – Intellectualisation 35 Mental states that lead to violence • Who is the victim? • What sort of violence? • Different states of mind – Affectful or affectless – Impulsive or controlled – Clear or confused – Excited or detached – Proactive or reactive Do they have anything in common? • Disturbance of reality: personal, social • Threat perception problems • Disturbance of connection to others: others do not seem real or human • Absence of consequential reasoning: nothing will matter later because this isn’t real • The wish to hurt and denigration of vulnerability Scully & Marolla (1984) • A study of convicted rapists • Excuses and justifications • Reluctant to use the word violent or to admit to use of weapon • Women were culpable in some way • It was a minor harm • Alcohol and drugs were to blame • I have emotional problems/I’m a nice guy really 38 The violent state of mind • Those who are violent typically see others as threat or prey • They have little sense of agency: they see themselves as being acted on by others • They therefore feel justified in what they do: no anxiety • They overcome inhibitions to violence (VIM) • A communication to the victim? 40 Seeing others as threat • Failure to mentalise negative affects of rage, hatred, fear • Projection of these feelings onto others • Panic, attack and contempt in response to conscious anxiety and perceived vulnerability • Unconscious identification with the aggressor Seeing others as prey • Failure to mentalise feelings of neediness and vulnerability when these are stimulated • Projection of vulnerability onto others • Denigration and derogation of weakness and need in others • Identification with the aggressor Self-justification: it feels right • Rigidity in moral reasoning: all or nothing thinking • Absence of forgiveness • Lack of empathy reduces anxiety • Strict dominance hierarchies: might is right • Reduction of shame and promotion of selfesteem 44 Violence can take place in the absence of conscious anxiety • Organised cruelty • May be individual or group • Associated with denigration and derogation of attachment feelings • Neediness associated with shame • Mastery and pride associated with denigration of vulnerability 45 Socio-Cultural risk factors - stereotypes about “acceptable” victims denigration of weakness as part of male gender role tolerance of substance misuse - tolerance of violence - access of weapons - violence by the state 46 Conclusions • There is not a single ‘criminal mind’ • There are mental states and self-accounts that make rule breaking more likely • What is this person’s attitude to their offending? • The importance of identities and stories • Listening to the voices of offenders may tell us most 48