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Contents of the
Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry
and the Law
Prior to 1997, the
Bulletin of the American Academy of Psychiatry
and the Law)
1973 - 2002, vol. 1 - vol. 30
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Abstracts available for articles beginning in
1986.
Vol. 1, 1973
Legal problems involved in implementing the right to treatment.
G. H. Morris,
1(1): 1-37, 1973
The mentally disordered defendant in limbo: His right to treatment in the
criminal process.
G. A. Toner,
1(1): 38-56, 1973
Teaching materials in forensic psychiatry.
J. R. Rappeport,
1(1): 57-60, 1973
Judicial remedies and institutional standards.
R. Slovenko,
1(2): 95-123, 1973
A view of traumatic neurosis.
H. A. Raskin,
1(2): 124-141, 1973
Remarks at meeting of APA Committee on Psychiatry and the Law/AAPL.
J. John S. Langford,
1(2): 142-155, 1973
The practice of psychiatry in the prison society.
B. M. Cormier,
1(2): 156-183, 1973
Who are the dangerous.
M. G. Rector,
1(3): 186-188, 1973
Implications from the Baxstrom experience.
H. J. Steadman,
1(3): 189-196, 1973
A response to implications from the Baxstrom experience.
J. R. Rappeport,
1(3): 197-198, 1973
A bill of rights for children.
J. Henry H. Foster,
1(3): 199-203, 1973
Dangerousness.
M. G. Goldzband,
1(4): 238-244, 1973
The psychiatrist and the subpoena.
M. Grossman,
1(4): 245-253, 1973
The personality of the compulsive drug user.
L. Wurmser,
1(4): 254-259, 1973
A joint effort between the court, the jail, and a drug treatment program.
W. E. Abramson and C. I. Thistel,
1(4): 260-266, 1973
Psychiatric consultation for the court.
S. Pollack,
1(4): 267-283, 1973
Psychosurgery.
R. Slovenko,
1(4): 284-288, 1973
LSD and competence.
W. Rieger and K. A. Kessler,
1(4): 289-290, 1973
Vol. 2, 1974
Forensic psychiatry--a specialty.
S. Pollack,
2(1): 1-6, 1974
Psychosurgery and other somatic means of altering behavior.
J. B. Robitscher,
2(1): 7-33, 1974
The officer-inmate relationship: its role in the Attica rebellion.
R. E. Gould,
2(1): 34-45, 1974
Survey of teaching programs in law and psychiatry.
R. L. Sadoff, J. W. Thrasher, Jr. and D. W. Gottlieb,
2(2): 67-72, 1974
The evaluation of prison treatment and preventive detention programs: some
problems faced by the Patuxent institution.
N. T. Sidley,
2(2): 73-95, 1974
Psychosurgery and the psychiatric implications of the Kaimowitz case.
R. T. Rada,
2(2): 96-100, 1974
Informed consent, confidentiality and privilege in psychiatry: practical
applications.
R. L. Sadoff,
2(2): 101-6, 1974
Informed consent, confidentiality and privilege in psychiatry: legal
implications.
R. J. Joling,
2(2): 107-10, 1974
An approach to recidivism.
W. Bromberg and B. Berrian,
2(2): 111-4, 1974
Anglo-American criminal insanity: an historical perspective.
J. M. Quen,
2(2): 115-23, 1974
Isaac Ray: have we learned his lessons?
J. M. Quen,
2(3): 137-47, 1974
Enforced treatment--is it treatment?
J. R. Rappefort,
2(3): 148-58, 1974
The right to treatment and the medical establishment.
A. A. Stone,
2(3): 159-67, 1974
Isaac Ray Symposium: Human rights, the law and psychiatric treatment.
Summary and discussion: the first day of the symposium.
J. R. Weisberger,
2(3): 168-71, 1974
Dangerousness as a criterion for confinement.
A. M. Dershowitz,
2(3): 172-9, 1974
Empiricism in mental health law.
A. L. McGarry,
2(3): 180-4, 1974
Emerging legal rights for the mentally handicapped.
B. J. Ennis, Jr.,
2(3): 185-93, 1974
Isaac Ray Symposium: Human rights, the law and psychiatric treatment.
Summary and discussion: the second day of the symposium.
J. R. Weisberger,
2(3): 194-5, 1974
Comments on the new Rhode Island Mental Health Law.
H. Taussig,
2(3): 196-7, 1974
Criminal justice and violence.
J. B. Robitscher,
2(4): 205-15, 1974
A functional information retrieval system for forensic psychiatrists (one
man's system).
J. R. Rappeport,
2(4): 216-9, 1974
A psychiatric ward run by inmates in a prison setting.
A. H. Peck,
2(4): 220-2, 1974
From moral treatment to railroading out of the mental hospital.
R. Slovenko and E. D. Luby,
2(4): 223-36, 1974
Historical reflections on American legal psychiatry.
J. M. Quen,
2(4): 237-41, 1974
Forensic psychiatry as a vehicle for teaching clinical psychiatry.
E. Tanay,
2(4): 242-5, 1974
Role conflicts of the prison psychiatrist.
R. Ketai,
2(4): 246-50, 1974
Factors affecting length of hospitalization in persons adjudicated not
guilty by reason of insanity.
G. Cooke and C. R. Sikorski,
2(4): 251-61, 1974
Forensic psychiatry training for child psychiatrists.
E. P. Benedek,
2(4): 262-5, 1974
The devil's advocate.
Anonymous,
2(4): 271-3, 1974
Editorial: The role of the psychiatrist expert witness.
H. E. Thomas,
2(4): iv, 1974
The president's message. As I see it--forensic psychiatry in balance.
S. L. Pollack,
2(4): v-vii, 1974
Vol. 3, 1975
Regressive behavior in maximum security prisoners: a preliminary
communication.
H. E. Thomas,
3(1): 1-9, 1976
Patuxent revisited.
J. R. Rappeport,
3(1): 10-6, 1976
Global amnesia: organic and functional considerations.
J. M. Suarez and A. T. Pittluck,
3(1): 17-24, 1976
A family therapist looks at the problem of incest.
G. P. Sholevar,
3(1): 25-31, 1976
Risks of state and private hospital psychiatrists in involuntary
hospitalization in re: right to treatment.
R. L. Sadoff,
3(1): 32-7, 1976
The devil's advocate.
Anonymous,
3(1): 50-1, 1976
Right to treatment.
I. Cohen, N. L. Cohen and R. L. Sadoff,
3(2): 59-65, 1975
Involuntary treatment--its legal limitations.
J. R. German,
3(2): 66-9, 1975
The right to education: due process and the inner city child.
L. J. Katz and R. J. Bonfield,
3(2): 70-82, 1975
Psychiatric testimony and the Rashomon phenomenon.
I. N. Perr,
3(2): 83-98, 1975
One right too many.
S. Rachlin,
3(2): 99-102, 1975
Court clinics and defendants' rights.
J. B. Robitscher,
3(2): 103-11, 1975
The devil's advocate. The Karen Anne Quinlan case.
H. H. Foster,
3(2): 117-8, 1975
The Commission on Judicial Action of the American Psychiatric Association:
origins and prospects--a personal view.
A. A. Stone,
3(3): 119-22, 1975
Some comments on labelling.
L. H. Roth,
3(3): 123-31, 1975
Historical reflections on the sesquicentennial of the founding of the
Boston Prison Discipline Society (1825-1854).
J. M. Quen,
3(3): 132-3, 1975
Recent legal-psychiatric developments in California.
S. Pollack,
3(3): 134-8, 1975
Some recent legal-psychiatric developments in the United States.
I. N. Perr,
3(3): 139-42, 1975
Psychiatric testimony in a criminal setting.
M. L. Perlin,
3(3): 143-51, 1975
Suicide among males in prison--why not?
H. E. Payson,
3(3): 152-61, 1975
The prison inmate's right to treatment and the general hospital: a case
report of acute intermittent porphyria.
J. R. Ciccone, S. Perez and D. J. Barry,
3(3): 162-4, 1975
Patterns of Eskimo homicide.
J. D. Bloom,
3(3): 165-74, 1975
Inservice training of nonprofessional counselors in a correctional
institution setting.
H. S. Bernard and B. S. Yudowitz,
3(3): 175-84, 1975
Use of depo-provera in the treatment of aggressive sexual offenders:
preliminary report of three cases.
D. J. Barry and J. R. Ciccone,
3(3): 179-84, 1975
The tort liability of the psychiatrist.
S. E. Fishalow,
3(4): 191-230, 1975
Aphasia and the expert medical witness.
R. T. Rada, B. E. Porch and R. Kellner,
3(4): 231-7, 1975
The right of the defendant to refuse an insanity plea.
O. M. Bruning,
3(4): 238-44, 1975
The influence on judges' sentencing practices of a mental evaluation.
G. Cooke and E. Pogany,
3(4): 245-51, 1975
Cross-cultural forensic psychiatry in Alaska.
J. D. Bloom,
3(4): 252-6, 1975
Causative factors in violence.
W. S. Wille,
3(4): 257-61, 1975
The devil's advocate.
H. H. Foster,
3(4): 263-4, 1975
Vol. 4, 1976
Introduction and history of position statement on the insanity defense for
the proposed Federal criminal code.
S. Pollack,
4(1): 1-23, 1976
Decision-making regarding release programs for committed criminal
offenders.
S. H. Manne and D. Rosenthal,
4(1): 24-36, 1976
Introduction of a psychiatric acute care clinic into a metropolitan jail.
J. Petrich,
4(1): 37-44, 1976
Competency to "cop a plea".
I. N. Perr,
4(1): 45-50, 1976
"Motiveless" public assassins.
J. L. Gallemore, Jr. and J. A. Panton,
4(1): 51-7, 1976
A psychiatric study of violent behavior in lifers.
R. Pakola and R. L. Sadoff,
4(1): 58-66, 1976
Some methodological problems in studying violent offenders.
S. E. Edelman and A. R. Felthous,
4(1): 67-72, 1976
The insantiy defense: M'Naghten vs. ALI.
R. H. Sauer and P. M. Mullens,
4(1): 73-5, 1976
Rights of the mentally handicapped.
M. L. Perlin,
4(1): 77-86, 1976
A guarded word of welcome.
M. G. Goldzband,
4(2): 101-4, 1976
An attorney's approach to psychiatrists in custody cases.
J. Lightner,
4(2): 105-13, 1976
The crisis of custody: how a psychiatrist can be of help.
T. A. Rodgers,
4(2): 114-9, 1976
Johnnie and Suzie, don't cry: Mommy and Daddy aren't that way.
T. L. Trunnell,
4(2): 120-6, 1976
Custody proceedings: battlefield or peace conference?
B. F. Lindsley,
4(2): 127-31, 1976
Legal implications of behavior modification programs.
M. L. Perlin,
4(2): 175-83, 1976
The devil's advocate [editorial].
H. H. Foster,
4(2): 194-6, 1976
Patients' rights and the psychiatrist's dilemma.
L. E. Kopolow,
4(3): 197-203, 1976
The role of the lawyer in mental health advocacy.
M. L. Perlin and W. W. Siggers,
4(3): 204-15, 1976
Legislative liaison as critical intervention.
W. D. Weitzel,
4(3): 216-20, 1976
Juvenile court: a behavioral science perspective.
J. M. Suarez and E. Smith,
4(3): 221-6, 1976
Juvenile court: a lawyer's reply to the behavioral science perspective.
B. McCarthy,
4(3): 227-30, 1976
Guardian's authority to involuntarily hospitalize the incompetent ward.
J. L. Sullivan,
4(3): 231-4, 1976
The battered child syndrome--some research aspects.
S. M. Smith,
4(3): 235-43, 1976
On the distinction between medical and legal diagnosis.
N. T. Sidley,
4(3): 244-50, 1976
An analysis of demographic variables in adolescent defendants evaluated in
a forensic psychiatry clinic.
R. Rosner, M. Wiederlight, M. B. Horner-Rosner and R. R. Wieczorek,
4(3): 251-7, 1976
Adolescent psychopathology in a family court.
H. G. Nurnberg,
4(3): 258-63, 1976
Justice is not a psychiatric term.
R. C. Marvit and K. Fukunaga,
4(3): 264-8, 1976
The right to refuse psychiatric treatment: a clinical perspective.
P. B. Hoffman,
4(3): 269-74, 1976
Collaboration between psychiatry and the law: a study of 100 referrals to
a court clinic.
J. R. Ciccone and D. J. Barry,
4(3): 275-80, 1976
The devil's advocate.
H. H. Foster,
4(3): 284-6, 1976
Public enemy no. 1 to community and mental health: the automobile.
R. Slovenko,
4(3): 287-9, 1976
Professional competence and the professional organization. Editorial.
N. T. Sidley,
4(3): iv-vi, 1976
Violence in families: an overview.
R. L. Sadoff,
4(4): 292-6, 1976
Neurological factors in violent behavior (the dyscontrol syndrome).
F. A. Elliott,
4(4): 297-315, 1976
Family violence and criminal behavior.
M. E. Wolfgang,
4(4): 316-27, 1976
Psychodynamic aspects of violence.
S. L. Halleck,
4(4): 328-35, 1976
Violence toward children: medicolegal aspects.
H. H. Foster, Jr.,
4(4): 336-40, 1976
Symposium on violence in families: questions and answers.
Anonymous,
4(4): 341-50, 1976
Folie a deux in the parents of psychosocial dwarfs: two cases.
J. Money and J. Werlwas,
4(4): 351-62, 1976
Juvenile court system. The devil's advocate.
H. H. Foster,
4(4): 367-9, 1976
Vol. 5, 1977
The right to refuse treatment: a broad view.
J. J. Cocozza and M. E. Melick,
5(1): 1-7, 1977
The right to refuse treatment: administrative considerations.
M. K. Arafeh,
5(1): 8-14, 1977
The right to refuse treatment: legal issues.
K. R. Wing,
5(1): 15-9, 1977
Declining interest in forensic psychiatry: recent developments in Denmark.
B. B. Svendsen,
5(1): 20-8, 1977
Hospital liability for suicide: a regional survey.
P. F. Slawson and D. E. Flinn,
5(1): 29-33, 1977
Changing laws and ethics in psychiatry.
R. L. Sadoff,
5(1): 34-40, 1977
Classification of offenders for prognostic and dispositional evaluation.
E. Revitch,
5(1): 41-50, 1977
Termination of parental rights: a descriptive review.
J. B. Reinhart, S. L. Evans and G. D. Fisher,
5(1): 51-60, 1977
Psychiatric hospitalization of criminal defendants: new horizons.
F. G. Reed and R. L. Fox,
5(1): 61-7, 1977
Living with your rights off.
P. B. Hoffman,
5(1): 68-74, 1977
Lesbian mother child custody: legal and psychiatric aspects.
B. S. Harris,
5(1): 75-89, 1977
When doctors disagree: differing views on competency.
R. L. Goldstein and M. Stone,
5(1): 90-7, 1977
The psychiatric evaluation of dangerousness in two trial court
jurisdictions.
M. L. Forst,
5(1): 98-110, 1977
Editorial: "Belegaled".
J. R. Rappeport,
5(1): iv-vii, 1977
The patuxent experiment.
P. P. Lejins,
5(2): 116-33, 1977
An overview of the Contract Research Corporation evaluation of Patuxent
Institution.
H. B. Shear,
5(2): 134-43, 1977
Patuxent and discretion in the criminal justice system.
B. H. Hoff,
5(2): 144-60, 1977
A cost-effectiveness analysis of Patuxent Institution.
N. M. Singer and H. S. Bloom,
5(2): 161-70, 1977
Patuxent institution from a psychiatric perspective, circa 1977.
P. B. Hoffman,
5(2): 171-99, 1977
A new look at recidivism among Patuxent inmates.
H. J. Steadman,
5(2): 200-9, 1977
A critique of the evaluation of Patuxent institution, with particular
attention to the issues of dangerousness and recidivism.
R. A. Gordon,
5(2): 210-55, 1977
The new Patuxent legislation.
J. R. Rappeport,
5(2): 256-67, 1977
The devil's advocate.
H. Foster,
5(2): 270-1, 1977
Patuxent experiment [editorial].
J. R. Rappeport,
5(2): v-vii, 1977
A consumer speaks to psychiatrists about advocacy.
P. Allen,
5(3): 272-5, 1977
The death penalty in South Africa: some psychiatric and psychological
elements.
B. Van Niekerk,
5(3): 276-86, 1977
Psychiatric testimony in death penalty litigation.
G. E. Dix,
5(3): 287-94, 1977
Legal approaches to foster care.
J. A. Christos,
5(3): 295-317, 1977
The professional guardian: a new type of non-institutional administrator.
H. E. Payson,
5(3): 318-26, 1977
Cross-examination of the psychiatrist, using publications.
I. N. Perr,
5(3): 327-31, 1977
Cross-examination of the psychiatrist, using publications: point
counter-point.
S. Pollack,
5(3): 332-5, 1977
Meeting a training need: an interdisciplinary seminar of family law and
child psychiatry.
S. N. Cohen, H. J. Folberg, W. H. Sack and J. Lingas,
5(3): 336-43, 1977
Type A, AB, B murderers: their relationship to the victims and to the
criminal justice system.
R. I. Simon,
5(3): 344-62, 1977
Medical criminology notes "1. Victim-precipitated criminal homicide.
P. E. Dietz,
5(3): 367-70, 1977
The Devil's Advocate.
H. J. Foster,
5(3): 371-3, 1977
Battered wives and battered children.
J. Robitscher,
5(4): 374-9, 1977
Violence in the family: abused wives and children.
P. Ottenberg,
5(4): 380-90, 1977
Society's vindication of the wife-batterer.
D. Martin,
5(4): 391-401, 1977
Pat Ford-Roegner panel on battered wives.
P. Ford-Roegner, S. Kearns and M. F. Nichols,
5(4): 402-7, 1977
The dynamics of abusive families and treatment considerations.
A. R. Tartler,
5(4): 408-14, 1977
Lucy McGough panel on battered children and the legal process.
L. McGough, A. Workman, J. L. Kennedy and R. Ruff,
5(4): 415-24, 1977
The right to refuse treatment.
H. C. Weinstein,
5(4): 425-37, 1977
The McQuillan decision: civil rights for the mentally iii offender.
E. P. Benedek and G. Farley,
5(4): 438-49, 1977
The expensive dalliance: assessing the cost of patient-therapist sex.
P. E. Mason and M. D. Stitham,
5(4): 450-5, 1977
Public skepticism: forensic psychiatry's albatross.
W. D. Weitzel,
5(4): 456-63, 1977
Medical criminology notes no.2 cosmetic surgical treatment of offenders.
P. E. Dietz,
5(4): 465-9, 1977
The devil's advocate.
H. H. Foster,
5(4): 470-3, 1977
Vol. 6, 1978
Psychiatrists and the jurors' dilemma.
R. A. Read, T. N. Rusk, G. H. Morris and L. P. Bozzetti, Jr.,
6(1): 1-12, 1978
Forensic and non-forensic psychiatrists: an empirical comparison.
P. E. Dietz,
6(1): 13-22, 1978
The experience of using DSM-III in a court clinic setting: I. Basic
changes in the methodology of psychiatric diagnosis.
J. R. Ciccone and D. J. Barry,
6(1): 23-5, 1978
The experience of using DSM-III in a court clinic setting: II Practicality
and effect of DSM-III on a court clinic's work with the legal system.
D. J. Barry and J. R. Ciccone,
6(1): 26-30, 1978
DSM-III and the legal system.
D. O. Boehm,
6(1): 31-5, 1978
De Clerambault in court: a forensic romance.
R. L. Goldstein,
6(1): 36-40, 1978
Guilt and innocence in the pre-sentence psychiatric examination: some
ethical considerations.
J. L. Simon,
6(1): 41-4, 1978
Preschoolers' responses to murder of their mothers by their fathers: a
study of four cases.
D. H. Schetky,
6(1): 45-57, 1978
Psychiatric malpractice: a California state-wide survey.
P. F. Slawson,
6(1): 58-63, 1978
Mind-stealing--plagio in Italy: a study in transcultural legal psychiatry.
I. N. Perr and M. Weinapple,
6(1): 64-79, 1978
Intervention in child abuse cases.
P. V. Berns,
6(1): 80-6, 1978
Psychotherapy and due process.
M. Sacks, J. Chertoff and J. M. Quen,
6(1): 87-92, 1978
Comprehensive survey of forensic psychiatric facilities in the United
States.
R. B. Sheldon and W. B. Norman,
6(1): 93-104, 1978
Medical criminology notes No. 3. Access to medical literature in medical
criminology.
P. E. Dietz,
6(1): 110-7, 1978
Private practice of jurisprudence in family court.
H. H. Foster, Jr.,
6(1): 118-21, 1978
Editor's introduction: the Isaac Ray award symposium.
N. Goldstein,
6(2): 122-7, 1978
Social systems and psychiatry.
M. Jones,
6(2): 128-38, 1978
The role of the psychiatrist in the criminal justice system.
D. L. Bazelon,
6(2): 139-46, 1978
Recollections of the dilemma about state hospitals in 1948, compared with
the dilemma in corrections in 1977.
K. A. Menninger,
6(2): 147-53, 1978
Prescriptions for reform--doing what we set out to do? juvenile justice:
changes in goals, procedures and semantics.
J. W. Polier,
6(2): 154-75, 1978
Changing patterns of treatment in Herstedvester: forensic psychiatric
considerations in retrospect and prospect.
G. K. Sturup,
6(2): 176-94, 1978
Social and cultural factors as a diminished capacity defense in criminal
law.
B. L. Diamond,
6(2): 195-208, 1978
The many faces of forensic psychiatry.
J. Robitscher,
6(2): 209-13, 1978
Behaviour and justice in primitive and civilized societies: the Inuit and
ourselves.
B. M. Cormier,
6(2): 214-25, 1978
On the preparation and use of psychiatric expert testimony: some
suggestions in an ongoing controversy.
A. S. Watson,
6(2): 226-46, 1978
Medical criminology notes No. 4: measuring the impact of Isaac Ray: a
citation analysis.
P. E. Dietz,
6(2): 249-55, 1978
Confidentiality.
H. H. Foster,
6(2): 256-8, 1978
President's message: a psychiatric explanation is not an excuse.
I. N. Perr,
6(2): iv-v, 1978
Necrophilia and lust murder: report of a rare occurrence.
S. M. Smith and C. Braun,
6(3): 259-68, 1978
Incest hoax: false accusations, false denials.
J. Goodwin, D. Sahd and R. T. Rada,
6(3): 269-76, 1978
Sexaully motivated burglaries.
E. Revitch,
6(3): 277-83, 1978
Sadism and masochism: sociological perspectives.
T. S. Weinberg,
6(3): 284-95, 1978
Drinking, alcholism, and the mentally disordered sex offender.
R. T. Rada, R. Kellner, D. R. Laws and W. W. Winslow,
6(3): 296-300, 1978
Rape reform: an appreciative-critical review.
G. Geis and R. Geis,
6(3): 301-12, 1978
Feminism and rape law reform.
M. D. Schwartz and T. R. Clear,
6(3): 313-21, 1978
Wife beating: a critique and reformulation of existing theory.
S. K. Steinmetz,
6(3): 322-34, 1978
Legal alternatives for battered women who kill their abusers.
J. Dvoskin,
6(3): 335-54, 1978
The devil's advocate.
H. H. Foster,
6(3): 362-3, 1978
The President's message: crime and punishment.
I. N. Perr,
6(3): iv-v, 1978
Psychodynamic differentiations of homicide.
E. Tanay,
6(4): 364-73, 1978
Guilty but mentally ill.
A. Robey,
6(4): 374-81, 1978
Anticipated misuse of psychiatry under the New York Juvenile Offender Law.
A. L. Halpern,
6(4): 382-7, 1978
The political offender: forensic psychiatric considerations.
P. J. Resnick,
6(4): 388-97, 1978
The ethics of pre-arraignment psychiatric examination: one Canadian
viewpoint.
B. T. Butler and R. E. Turner,
6(4): 398-404, 1978
Dimensions of third party protection.
B. Bursten,
6(4): 405-13, 1978
A case of kleptomania.
B. A. Singer,
6(4): 414-22, 1978
Using a moot court experience in the education of psychiatric residents.
S. R. Dunlop,
6(4): 423-32, 1978
Persuasion of law students to a psychiatric perspective.
W. D. Weitzel and J. Batt,
6(4): 433-8, 1978
Assessing competency to stand trial: a case study of technology diffusion
in four states.
J. Schreiber,
6(4): 439-57, 1978
Ward meetings in a security hospital.
C. G. Smith,
6(4): 458-67, 1978
Medical criminology notes No. 5: male homosexual prostitution.
P. E. Dietz,
6(4): 468-71, 1978
A response to the Devil's Advocate--Ronwin and Bonham.
A. L. Halpern,
6(4): 472-4, 1978
The Devil's Advocate.
H. H. Foster,
6(4): 475-9, 1978
President's message: The most beneficial alternative: a counterpoint to
the least restrictive alternative.
I. N. Perr,
6(4): iv-vii, 1978
Vol. 7, 1979
Patuxent, psychiatry and politics: the psychopolitical pursuit of policy
(or "The perils of Pauline in policy-land").
P. B. Hoffman,
7(1): 1-10, 1979
Characteristics of violent patients admitted to public hospitals.
K. Tardiff and A. Sweillam,
7(1): 11-7, 1979
Hypnosis, sodium amytal, and confessions.
H. V. Zonana,
7(1): 18-28, 1979
Apres the acquittal, le deluge: release procedures and allocation of the
burden of proof in subsequent review hearings following a finding of "not guilty
by reason of insanity" in State of New Jersey v. Hetra Fields.
M. L. Perlin,
7(1): 29-38, 1979
Impact of Davis v. Watkins on Ohio forensic hospital practice.
A. Heller,
7(1): 39-62, 1979
Life events and antisocial behavior.
J. R. Ciccone and G. B. Kaskey,
7(1): 63-8, 1979
The criminal law and the incest offender: a case for decriminalization?
R. B. Sklar,
7(1): 69-77, 1979
Legal and psychiatric issues on the hospitalization of children: the New
Jersey experience.
M. Weinapple, J. E. Keefe and P. G. Manto, Jr.,
7(1): 78-94, 1979
The first year of operation under the new Patuxent law.
W. A. Kohlmeyer,
7(1): 95-102, 1979
The devil's advocate.
H. H. Foster, Jr.,
7(1): 115-7, 1979
President's message: laetrile, legislation, and chicken soup.
I. N. Perr,
7(1): ix-xi, 1979
In memoriam Peter Browning Hoffman (1937-1979).
I. N. Perr,
7(1): vii-viii, 1979
Medical care in correctional institutions: the AMA project.
H. C. Modlin,
7(2): 118-24, 1979
Crime and the insanity defense, an international comparison: Ontario and
New York state.
C. Greenland,
7(2): 125-38, 1979
Women and cirme.
B. F. Price,
7(2): 139-49, 1979
Drug and alcohol problems in the criminal justice system.
E. C. Senay,
7(2): 150-6, 1979
Psychiatric treatment for offenders.
J. Petrich,
7(2): 157-65, 1979
A study of criminal defendants referred for competency to stand trial in
New York City.
H. Bluestone and J. Melella,
7(2): 166-78, 1979
Public protection and the trend to determinate sentence structure.
T. L. Clanon,
7(2): 179-89, 1979
The psychiatric intensive care unit--an in-hospital treatment of violent
adult patients.
P. M. Crain and E. G. Jordan,
7(2): 190-8, 1979
Opinions concerning the insanity plea and criminality among mental
patients.
R. A. Pasewark and D. Seidenzahl,
7(2): 199-204, 1979
The president's message: congressional proposals and the new assault on
privacy.
I. N. Perr,
7(2): iv-vii, 1979
Editor's introduction: symposium on psychiatry and the criminal offender.
A. L. Halpern,
7(2): vii-ix, 1979
Trauma, stress, and multiple sclerosis.
C. M. Poser,
7(3): 209-18, 1979
Amnesia and homicide: the Padola case and a study of thirty cases.
J. M. Bradford and S. M. Smith,
7(3): 219-31, 1979
Head trauma, traumatic neurosis, and the forensic report.
L. K. Richards,
7(3): 232-8, 1979
Detection of deception: Its application to forensic psychiatry.
B. E. Lynch,
7(3): 239-44, 1979
"Whiplash" fictive or factual.
W. F. Gorman,
7(3): 245-8, 1979
Some psychodynamic aspects of transsexual, homosexual and transvestite
patients presenting themselves to a psychiatric gender clinic.
G. J. Sarwer-Foner,
7(3): 249-58, 1979
Transsexualism and the law.
R. G. Myers,
7(3): 259-66, 1979
Transsexual marriages and the role of the court: issues for psychiatry and
society.
E. M. Levine,
7(3): 267-74, 1979
Homicide: a medico-legal study of thirty cases.
D. Pagan and S. M. Smith,
7(3): 275-85, 1979
Amok.
J. Arboleda-Florez,
7(3): 286-95, 1979
Guardianship: an alternative to "I'm sorry".
L. H. Haller,
7(3): 296-305, 1979
"Rotting with their rights on": constitutional theory and clinical reality
in drug refusal by psychiatric patients.
P. S. Appelbaum and T. G. Gutheil,
7(3): 306-15, 1979
Teaching forensic psychiatry.
R. L. Sadoff, T. P. Thornberry, D. W. Gottlieb and J. Young,
7(3): 316-25, 1979
The devil's advocate [editorial].
H. H. Foster,
7(3): 330-2, 1979
The president's message: Doctor-patient confidentiality--suggested legal
protections.
I. N. Perr,
7(3): iv-viii, 1979
The organic aspects of forensic psychiatry [editorial].
L. K. Richards,
7(3): ix-x, 1979
Teaching "street law" to the criminally insane.
J. T. Smith, M. Fisher and J. Schwartz,
7(4): 333-41, 1979
Adolescents accused of murder and manslaughter: a five-year descriptive
study.
R. Rosner, M. Wiederlight, M. B. Rosner and R. R. Wieczorek,
7(4): 342-51, 1979
Voluntariness of waiver of Fifth Amendment rights.
B. Bursten,
7(4): 352-62, 1979
Forensic psychiatry: a comprehensive residency program at Southern
Illinois University School of Medicine.
T. R. LeBlang and M. D. Henderson,
7(4): 363-80, 1979
Oregon's civil commitment, statute: Stone's "thank-you theory" - a
judicial survey.
J. D. Bloom, J. H. Shore and J. Treleaven,
7(4): 381-9, 1979
Competency to consent to voluntary psychiatric hospitalization: a
theoretical approach.
P. S. Appelbaum and A. L. Bateman,
7(4): 390-9, 1979
The psychiatric autopsy: its legal application.
O. L. Bendheim,
7(4): 400-10, 1979
The Virginia Commitment Law: clinical characteristics of patients
hospitalized involuntarily by court order.
F. P. LeBuffe, S. I. Granger and T. N. Wise,
7(4): 411-21, 1979
The episodic dyscontrol syndrome and criminal responsibility.
R. A. Ratner and D. Shapiro,
7(4): 422-31, 1979
A comparison of alcoholics and non-alcholics charged with rape.
G. W. Barnard, C. Holzer and H. Vera,
7(4): 432-45, 1979
The devil's advocate.
H. H. Foster,
7(4): 446-52, 1979
President's message: egalitarianism, medical care, and mental health.
I. N. Perr,
7(4): iv-vii, 1979
Guest editorial.
J. M. Quen,
7(4): viii-x, 1979
Vol. 8, 1980
The right to refuse treatment and the abolition of involuntary
hospitalization of the mentally ill.
E. Tanay,
8(1): 1-14, 1980
Recidivism among treated criminal psychiatric patients.
S. M. Rolland,
8(1): 15-27, 1980
Delivering community mental health services to a county jail population: a
research note.
J. Monahan and L. B. McDonough,
8(1): 28-32, 1980
Rights of ex-patients in the community: the next frontier.
M. L. Perlin,
8(1): 33-43, 1980
G. C. Eisenberg, B. M. Barnes and T. G. Gutheil,
8(1): 44-55, 1980
The insanity defense in Illinois -- a psychiatric perspective.
J. L. Cavanaugh, Jr., R. R. Rogers and B. Price,
8(1): 56-61, 1980
D. A. Halperin,
8(1): 62-71, 1980
Community intervention with the mentally ill offender: a residential
program.
J. Goldmeier, E. V. White, C. Ulrich and G. A. Klein,
8(1): 72-82, 1980
Modernization of a mental health act: I. Commitment patterns.
M. R. Munetz, K. R. Kaufman and C. L. Rich,
8(1): 83-93, 1980
Civil commitment of American Indians.
J. D. Bloom, S. M. Manson and G. Neligh,
8(1): 94-103, 1980
A. R. Felthous,
8(1): 104-10, 1980
The prostitution of forensic psychiatry in the Soviet Union.
R. Scarnati,
8(1): 111-3, 1980
Informed consent: psychotic patients and research.
M. J. Mills, L. C. Hsu and P. A. Berger,
8(2): 119-32, 1980
Legislating human rights: informed consent and the Pennsylvania Mental
Health Procedures Act.
8(2): 133-51, 1980
The weather report model of informed consent: problems in preserving
patient voluntariness.
C. W. Lidz,
8(2): 152-60, 1980
The bureaucratization of responsibility: the case of informed consent.
E. Zerubavel,
8(2): 161-7, 1980
The rights of juveniles in "voluntary" psychiatric commitments: some
empirical observations.
8(2): 168-74, 1980
"Misinformed" consent.
D. A. Halperin,
8(2): 175-8, 1980
The constitutional right to refuse antipsychotic medications.
A. D. Brooks,
8(2): 179-221, 1980
The devil's advocate.
H. H. Foster,
8(2): 229-32, 1980
P. S. Appelbaum,
8(3): 233-9, 1980
A longitudinal study of adolescent murderers.
B. M. Cormier and B. Markus,
8(3): 240-60, 1980
Impact of change in legal standard for those adjudicated not guilty by
reason of insanity 1975-1979.
M. L. Criss and D. R. Racine,
8(3): 261-71, 1980
M. M. Harrington and A. O. Keary,
8(3): 272-9, 1980
Sex offenses: a short questionnaire assessing knowledge and attitudes.
S. Johnson and D. Blazer,
8(3): 280-7, 1980
Amnesia: its detection by psychophysiological measures.
B. E. Lynch and J. M. Bradford,, 8(3): 288-97, 1980
Psychiatric aspects of familicide.
C. P. Malmquist,
8(3): 298-304, 1980
Voluntary "involuntary" commitment--the briar-patch syndrome.
R. D. Miller,
8(3): 305-12, 1980
The rights of involuntary patients to refuse pharmacotherapy: what is
reasonable?
M. J. Mills,
8(3): 313-34, 1980
Insanity plea in Connecticut.
B. L. Phillips and R. A. Pasewark,
8(3): 335-44, 1980
The Boston State Hospital case: its impact on the handling of future
mental health litigation.
S. Schultz,
8(3): 345-51, 1980
President's message: reasoning behind conclusions in psychiatric reports
and testimony.
N. T. Sidley,
8(3): iv-viii, 1980
The education of the psychiatrist of tomorrow.
J. Romano,
8(4): 356-65, 1980
D. J. Barry,
8(4): 366-72, 1980
A consultation model for post-doctoral training in forensic psychiatry.
J. L. Cavanaugh, Jr. and R. Rogers,
8(4): 373-80, 1980
Accreditation of fellowship programs in forensic psychiatry: a preliminary
report.
R. Rosner,
8(4): 381-6, 1980
R. B. Lacoursiere,
8(4): 387-400, 1980
The expert witness as a teacher.
E. Tanay,
8(4): 401-11, 1980
Legislative acts and psychiatric input--a New Jersey experience.
I. N. Perr,
8(4): 412-25, 1980
The unconsciousness defense as applied to post traumatic stress disorder
in a Vietnam veteran.
D. T. Apostle,
8(4): 426-30, 1980
R. J. Bonnie, C. R. Showalter and V. Roddy,
8(4): 431-44, 1980
Theories of psychiatric defense in workmen's compensation cases.
R. R. Parlour and L. R. Jones,
8(4): 445-55, 1980
Plasma androgens and the sex offender.
R. T. Rada,
8(4): 456-64, 1980
M. L. Radelet,
8(4): 465-76, 1980
President's message: The ethics of forensic psychiatry.
N. T. Sidley,
8(4): iv-viii, 1980
The forensic psychiatrist as teacher.
J. R. Ciccone,
8(4): ix-xi, 1980
Vol. 9, 1981
L. H. Roth,
9(1): 10-4, 1981
Wills, testamentary capacity and undue influence.
I. N. Peer,
9(1): 15-22, 1981
Mania, crime and the insanity defense: a case report.
R. A. Ratner,
9(1): 23-32, 1981
Assault in hospitals and placement in the community.
K. Tardiff,
9(1): 33-9, 1981
Female offenders referred for pre-trial psychiatric evaluation.
A. E. Daniel and P. W. Harris,
9(1): 40-7, 1981
A. R. Felthous,
9(1): 48-53, 1981
Confidentiality or communication in the treatment of the mentally ill.
R. D. Miller,
9(1): 54-9, 1981
The pre-trial examination process in Missouri: a descriptive study.
J. Petrila, J. Selle, P. C. Rouse, C. Evans and D. Moore,
9(1): 60-85, 1981
Disposition of insanity defense cases in Oregon.
J. L. Bloom and J. D. Bloom,
9(2): 93-9, 1981
L. O. Gostin,
9(2): 100-15, 1981
Isolated violence to the loved one.
B. Bursten,
9(2): 116-27, 1981
E. F. Isenberg and T. G. Gutheil,
9(2): 128-39, 1981
Psychiatric consultation to attorneys for abused and neglected children.
S. J. Kaplan, 9(2): 140-8, 1981
An invitation to the dance: an empirical response to Chief Justice Warren
Burger's "time-consuming procedural minuets" theory in Parham v. J.R.
M. L. Perlin,
9(2): 149-64, 1981
Law and psychiatry: a stormy marriage.
W. Bromberg,
9(3): 172-9, 1981
Realism and drug refusal: a reply to Appelbaum and Gutheil.
G. E. Dix,
9(3): 180-98, 1981
The right to refuse treatment: the real issue is quality of care.
P. S. Appelbaum and T. G. Gutheil,
9(3): 199-202, 1981
J. D. Bloom, J. H. Shore and B. Arvidson,
9(3): 203-9, 1981
Can joint custody serve the best interests of the child?
G. H. Miller,
9(3): 210-7, 1981
Treatment of juvenile delinquents.
K. A. Turner,
9(3): 218-23, 1981
An investigation of treatment recommendations made by a court clinic.
L. Caravello, C. Ginnetti, C. Ford and J. Lawall,
9(3): 224-32, 1981
Guardianship and the right to refuse treatment: a critique of the Roe
case.
M. J. Mills and T. G. Gutheil,
9(4): 239-46, 1981
The right of a minor to confidentiality: an aftermath of Bartley v.
Kremens.
M. Weinapple and I. N. Perr,
9(4): 247-54, 1981
Arson update: a review of the literature on firesetting.
N. H. Blumberg,
9(4): 255-65, 1981
Intelligence, psychosis, and competency to stand trial.
M. S. Heller, W. H. Traylor, S. M. Ehrlich and D. Lester,
9(4): 267-74, 1981
Case study of an intriguing "primitive" murder trial: financial settlement
between the murderer and the victim's family.
K. T. Wasserman,
9(4): 275-84, 1981
Integrity checks on the witness stand.
E. M. Colbach,
9(4): 285-8, 1981
Vol. 10, 1982
The best interests of the child with a lesbian mother.
R. Green,
10(1): 7-15, 1982
Legal conceptualizations, legal fictions, and the manipulation of reality:
conflict between models of decision making in psychiatry and law.
T. G. Gutheil and M. J. Mills,
10(1): 17-27, 1982
The inappropriate commitment of the aged.
L. R. Jones, R. R. Parlour and L. W. Badger,
10(1): 29-38, 1982
Arson: a diagnostic study.
D. F. Koson and J. Dvoskin,
10(1): 39-49, 1982
Diagnostic classification of 120 delinquent boys.
J. H. Kashani, E. Horwitz and A. E. Daniel,
10(1): 51-60, 1982
Exploring diagnostic formulations for violent delinquent adolescents:
conceptual considerations.
A. C. Mezzich,
10(1): 61-7, 1982
Tardive dyskinesia and informed consent: myths and realities.
M. R. Munetz, L. H. Roth and C. L. Cornes,
10(2): 77-88, 1982
An examination of the use of transcultural data in the courtroom.
J. D. Bloom and J. L. Bloom,
10(2): 89-95, 1982
What if antisocial personality is an illness?
B. Bursten,
10(2): 97-102, 1982
Involuntary abandonment: infants of imprisoned parents.
P. Ash and M. Guyer,
10(2): 103-13, 1982
Countertransference on the witness stand: a flight from self?
D. H. Schetky and E. M. Colbach,
10(2): 115-21, 1982
Profile of defendants seen for pre-sentence psychiatric examination.
B. Protter and S. Travin,
10(2): 123-34, 1982
An English psychiatrist looks at dangerousness.
J. Gunn,
10(3): 143-53, 1982
Characteristics of persons committed to Oregon's Psychiatric Security
Review Board.
J. L. Rogers and J. D. Bloom,
10(3): 155-64, 1982
The mental-mental muddle and work comp in Oregon.
E. M. Colbach,
10(3): 165-9, 1982
Phencyclidine abuse and crime: a psychiatric perspective.
B. J. Fauman and M. A. Fauman,
10(3): 171-6, 1982
A survey of five types of dangerous behavior among chronic psychiatric
patients.
K. Tardiff,
10(3): 177-82, 1982
Involuntary patients in general hospitals: a positive view.
J. S. LaWall,
10(3): 183-8, 1982
When the patient threatens violence: an empirical study of clinical
practice after Tarasoff.
J. C. Beck,
10(3): 189-201, 1982
Epileptic psychosis and insanity: case study and review.
P. D. Bacon and E. P. Benedek,
10(3): 203-10, 1982
The role of stepparents in child custody disputes.
A. E. Atwell, U. S. Moore and C. S. Nowell,
10(3): 211-7, 1982
The psychiatrist and political dissidents.
D. Leigh,
10(4): 227-32, 1982
Refusing treatment--who shall decide?
I. N. Perr,
10(4): 233-47, 1982
Effects of a new involuntary commitment law: expectations and reality.
L. R. Faulkner, J. D. Bloom and K. Kundahl-Stanley,
10(4): 249-59, 1982
Female homicide offenders referred for pre-trial psychiatric examination:
a descriptive study.
A. E. Daniel and P. W. Harris,
10(4): 261-9, 1982
Till death do us part: a study of spouse murder.
G. W. Barnard, H. Vera, M. I. Vera and G. Newman,
10(4): 271-80, 1982
Accreditation of Fellowship Programs in Forensic Psychiatry: the
development of the final report on standards.
R. Rosner,
10(4): 281-92, 1982
Vol. 11, 1983
Local variations in the civil commitment process.
L. R. Faulkner, J. D. Bloom, M. R. Resnick and T. O. Stern,
11(1): 5-15, 1983
The Multiple Personality Syndrome and criminal defense.
A. P. French and B. R. Shechmeister,
11(1): 17-25, 1983
Criminal insanity: from a historical point of view.
R. Smith,
11(1): 27-34, 1983
The ALI test for insanity: a re-examination.
G. H. Miller,
11(1): 35-41, 1983
Changes in North Carolina civil commitment statutes: the impact of
attorneys.
R. D. Miller and P. B. Fiddleman,
11(1): 43-50, 1983
Family opposition to psychiatric treatment: a medicolegal dilemma.
L. F. Sparr and L. H. Roth,
11(1): 51-5, 1983
Medical-legal ramifications of an autoerotic asphyxial death.
E. C. Miller and S. D. Milbrath,
11(1): 57-68, 1983
Mania and crime: a study of 100 manic defendants.
J. S. Wulach,
11(1): 69-75, 1983
The hostility of the burger court to mental health law reform litigation.
J. Brant,
11(1): 77-90, 1983
Primate aggression and evolution: an overview of sociobiological and
anthropological perspectives.
J. J. McKenna,
11(2): 105-30, 1983
Biology of aggression.
C. L. Coe and S. Levine,
11(2): 131-48, 1983
Plasma androgens in violent and nonviolent sex offenders.
R. T. Rada, D. R. Laws, R. Kellner, L. Stivastava and G. Peake,
11(2): 149-58, 1983
The hormonal treatment of sexual offenders.
J. M. Bradford,
11(2): 159-69, 1983
Clinical predictions of dangerousness: two-year follow-up of 408 pre-trial
forensic cases.
D. Sepejak, R. J. Menzies, C. D. Webster and F. A. Jensen,
11(2): 171-81, 1983
Proximate cause and traumatic neurosis.
N. T. Sidley,
11(3): 197-206, 1983
Famous and notorious cases, publication and privacy.
I. N. Perr,
11(3): 207-13, 1983
A survey of drugs used in the management of assaultive inpatients.
K. Tardiff,
11(3): 215-22, 1983
The significance of countertransference and related issues in a
multiservice court clinic.
B. Protter and S. Travin,
11(3): 223-30, 1983
Adolescent separation-individuation and the court.
S. Eth,
11(3): 231-8, 1983
A new pretrial screening program.
J. R. Rappeport, N. P. Conti and B. Rudnick,
11(3): 239-48, 1983
Crisis intervention in interpartner abuse.
A. R. Felthous,
11(3): 249-60, 1983
Competence to stand trial in Connecticut.
D. C. Herron, H. V. Zonana and L. E. Crane,
11(3): 261-71, 1983
Sigmund Freud: forensic psychiatrist.
R. L. Goldstein,
11(3): 273-7, 1983
A footnote to Parham: Was J. L. a casualty of the mental health bar?
R. B. Lacoursiere,
11(3): 279-85, 1983
Preparation of the sexually abused child for court testimony.
H. Bauer,
11(3): 287-9, 1983
Pathological gambling: a new insanity defense.
A. L. McGarry,
11(4): 301-8, 1983
Sex law reform in an international perspective: England and Wales and
Canada.
C. Greenland,
11(4): 309-30, 1983
Childhood and family background of killers seen for psychiatric
assessment: a controlled study.
R. Langevin, D. Paitich, B. Orchard, L. Handy and A. Russon,
11(4): 331-41, 1983
Shoplifting: an occasional crime of the moral majority.
W. Cupchik and J. D. Atcheson,
11(4): 343-54, 1983
Guilty verdict in a murder committed by a veteran with Post-traumatic
Stress Disorder.
B. L. Grant and D. J. Coons,
11(4): 355-8, 1983
Movies and behavior among hospitalized mentally disordered offenders.
B. Harry,
11(4): 359-64, 1983
The offense records of a sample of convicted exhibitionists.
E. F. Berah and R. G. Myers,
11(4): 365-9, 1983
A unique review of rejected police candidates: psychiatric and psychologic
aspects.
I. N. Perr,
11(4): 371-8, 1983
Are there impartial expert psychiatric witnesses?
W. F. Gorman,
11(4): 379-82, 1983
Dissection of the prongs of ALI. A retrospective assessment of criminal
responsibility by the psychiatric staff of the Clifton T. Perkins Hospital
Center.
S. B. Silver and M. K. Spodak,
11(4): 383-91, 1983
Vol. 12, 1984
Morality, equality, and expertise: renegotiating the relationship between
psychiatry and the criminal law.
R. J. Bonnie,
12(1): 5-20, 1984
Surrogate motherhood, psychiatric screening and informed consent, baby
selling, and public policy.
P. J. Parker,
12(1): 21-39, 1984
The reliability and validity of dangerous behavior predictions.
C. D. Webster, D. S. Sepejak, R. J. Menzies, D. J. Slomen, F. A. Jensen and
B. T. Butler,
12(1): 41-50, 1984
Ambivalence, alliance, and advocacy: misunderstood dualities in psychiatry
and law.
T. G. Gutheil and R. Magraw,
12(1): 51-8, 1984
Treatment refusal in a forensic hospital: ill-use of the lasting right.
P. Rodenhauser,
12(1): 59-63, 1984
A study of the right to refuse treatment.
I. N. Hassenfeld and B. Grumet,
12(1): 65-74, 1984
Legal outcome and clinical findings: a study of insanity evaluations.
R. Rogers, J. L. Cavanaugh, Jr., W. Seman and M. Harris,
12(1): 75-83, 1984
A clinical evaluation of maximum security hospital patients by staff and
independent psychiatric consultants.
M. S. Heller, W. H. Traylor, S. M. Ehrlich and D. Lester,
12(1): 85-92, 1984
Psychiatry behind bars.
E. V. Valdiserri,
12(1): 93-9, 1984
Confidentiality: an empirical test of the utilitarian perspective.
P. S. Appelbaum, G. Kapen, B. Walters, C. Lidz and L. H. Roth,
12(2): 109-16, 1984
Competence to give informed consent for medical procedures.
R. Weinstock, R. Copelan and A. Bagheri,
12(2): 117-25, 1984
Ethics and expert witnesses: the troubled role of psychiatrists in court.
C. D. Clements and J. R. Ciccone,
12(2): 127-36, 1984
Court implementation of mental health professionals' recommendations in
contested child custody and visitation cases.
P. Ash and M. Guyer,
12(2): 137-47, 1984
Effects of joint custody on children.
A. E. Atwell, U. S. Moore, E. Nielsen and Z. Levite,
12(2): 149-57, 1984
Psychiatrists and capital sentencing: risks and responsibilities in a
unique legal setting.
C. R. Showalter and R. J. Bonnie,
12(2): 159-67, 1984
Hypotheticals, psychiatric testimony, and the death sentence.
P. S. Appelbaum,
12(2): 169-77, 1984
The ethical boundaries of forensic psychiatry: a view from the ivory
tower.
A. A. Stone,
12(3): 209-19, 1984
Response from a straw man.
A. S. Watson,
12(3): 221-4, 1984
Psychiatric ethics in the courtroom.
P. S. Appelbaum,
12(3): 225-31, 1984
The ivory tower v. the marketplace.
H. C. Modlin,
12(3): 233-6, 1984
Forensic psychiatry: critique of a critique.
H. V. Zonana,
12(3): 237-41, 1984
Practical ethical problems of the forensic psychiatrist in dealing with
attorneys.
R. L. Sadoff,
12(3): 243-52, 1984
Ethical issues in forensic psychiatry: from an attorney's perspective.
B. A. Weiner,
12(3): 253-61, 1984
The ethical practice of forensic psychiatry: a view from the trenches.
J. R. Ciccone and C. D. Clements,
12(3): 263-77, 1984
The ethical dilemmas of forensic psychiatry: a utilitarian approach.
S. L. Halleck,
12(3): 279-88, 1984
How should forensic psychiatry police itself? Guidelines and grievances:
the AAPL Committee on Ethics.
H. C. Weinstein,
12(3): 289-302, 1984
The first presidential assassination attempt.
H. Zonana,
12(4): 309-22, 1984
Hospitalization of the dangerous patient: legal pressures and clinical
responses.
P. S. Appelbaum,
12(4): 323-9, 1984
The criminal defendant with identified mental disorder.
J. C. Beck, N. Borenstein and J. Dreyfus,
12(4): 331-8, 1984
A study of violence within a forensic treatment facility.
G. W. Barnard, L. Robbins, G. Newman and F. d. Carrera,
12(4): 339-48, 1984
The treatment review panel: a solution to treatment refusal?
J. M. Zito, S. L. Lentz, W. W. Routt and G. W. Olson,
12(4): 349-58, 1984
Rural civil commitment.
L. R. Faulkner, J. D. Bloom and T. O. Stern,
12(4): 359-71, 1984
Criminality of discharged insanity acquittees: fifteen year experience in
Maryland reviewed.
M. K. Spodak, S. B. Silver and C. U. Wright,
12(4): 373-82, 1984
Oregon's new insanity defense system: a review of the first five years,
1978 to 1982.
J. L. Rogers, J. D. Bloom and S. M. Manson,
12(4): 383-402, 1984
Comprehensive survey of forensic psychiatrists: their training and their
practices.
C. D. Hanson, R. L. Sadoff, P. Sager, J. Dent and D. Stagliano,
12(4): 403-10, 1984
Vol. 13, 1985
Assaults in hospitals.
W. H. Reid, M. F. Bollinger and G. Edwards,
13(1): 1-4, 1985
Reasonable medical certainty.
J. R. Rappeport,
13(1): 5-15, 1985
Explanations of pedophilia: review of empirical research.
S. Araji and D. Finkelhor,
13(1): 17-37, 1985
Development of a rational taxonomy for the classification of rapists: the
Massachusetts Treatment Center system.
R. Prentky, M. Cohen and T. Seghorn,
13(1): 39-70, 1985
Psychiatric perspectives on civil liability for suicide.
A. M. Drukteinis,
13(1): 71-83, 1985
Offenders in a silent world: hearing impairment and deafness in relation
to criminality, incompetence, and insanity.
B. Harry and P. E. Dietz,
13(1): 85-96, 1985
The detection of malingered amnesia in accused murderers.
S. D. Parwatikar, W. R. Holcomb and K. A. d. Menninger,
13(1): 97-103, 1985
Observations on the outcome of specialty education and training in
forensic psychiatry.
S. Pollack,
13(2): 117-9, 1985
Reasonable medical certainty, diagnostic thresholds, and definitions of
mental illness in the legal context.
B. L. Diamond,
13(2): 121-8, 1985
Can psychiatry contribute to gun control?
W. Bromberg,
13(2): 129-37, 1985
Is there an assault syndrome?
H. C. Modlin,
13(2): 139-45, 1985
Beyond the scientific limits of expert testimony.
O. E. Wasyliw, J. L. Cavanaugh, Jr. and R. Rogers,
13(2): 147-58, 1985
The consultation model and forensic psychiatric practice.
J. D. Bloom and J. L. Bloom,
13(2): 159-64, 1985
Medical school forensic psychiatry units in health care delivery
facilities rather than criminal justice institutions: an alternative model.
G. J. Sarwer-Foner, S. Smith and J. Bradford,
13(2): 165-72, 1985
Seymour Pollack and the American Board of Forensic Psychiatry.
J. R. Rappeport and A. L. Halpern,
13(2): 173-5, 1985
Seymour Pollack, MD, and the creation of AAPL regional chapters.
R. Rosner,
13(2): 177-84, 1985
In memoriam: Seymour Pollack, MA, MD, 1916-1982.
M. I. Tuchler,
13(2): 185-8, 1985
Sanctum sanctorum: the psychiatrist's role in postrial competency
examination of jurors.
Anonymous,
13(2): 191-203, 1985
Suicide litigation and risk management: a review of 32 cases.
I. N. Perr,
13(3): 209-19, 1985
Children who witness violence: tortious aspects.
C. P. Malmquist,
13(3): 221-31, 1985
A comparison between men charged with domestic and nondomestic homicide.
A. E. Daniel and W. R. Holcomb,
13(3): 233-41, 1985
Use of summons in involuntary civil commitment.
M. L. Durham and H. D. Carr,
13(3): 243-51, 1985
The Mental-Mental Muddle and Work Comp in Oregon. II.
E. M. Colbach,
13(3): 253-8, 1985
Decision-making in child abuse and neglect.
S. Wasserman and A. Rosenfeld,
13(3): 259-71, 1985
Detecting child abuse by studying the parents.
B. Bursten,
13(3): 273-81, 1985
The role of unconscious conflict in informed consent.
B. Zeichner,
13(3): 283-90, 1985
A case of child abandonment--reflections on criminal responsibility in
adolescence.
R. A. Ratner,
13(3): 291-301, 1985
The use of legal rhetoric in a clinical setting: advocating the advocates.
P. B. Kraft,
13(4): 313-23, 1985
Patients' rights advocates in San Francisco.
R. L. Binder,
13(4): 325-36, 1985
The harassment of forensic psychiatrists outside of court.
R. D. Miller,
13(4): 337-43, 1985
The effect of mental health system changes on civil commitment.
L. R. Faulkner, J. D. Bloom, B. H. McFarland and T. O. Stern,
13(4): 345-57, 1985
Experts in church courts: a role not sacred.
J. L. Young and E. E. Griffith,
13(4): 359-68, 1985
The post-Vietnam stress syndrome: some cautions.
E. M. Colbach,
13(4): 369-72, 1985
The Advisory Review Board and characteristics of patients on warrants of
the Lieutenant Governor in Ontario.
M. S. Phillips, T. Landau, D. Sepejak and C. Osborne,
13(4): 373-84, 1985
Violence and official diagnostic nomenclature.
B. Harry,
13(4): 385-8, 1985
The judge's view of competency evaluations.
H. Owens, R. Rosner and R. B. Harmon,
13(4): 389-97, 1985
Psychiatric injury in the women's workplace.
B. Bursten,
13(4): 399-406, 1985
Treating the not guilty by reason of insanity outpatient: a two-year
study.
J. L. Cavanaugh, Jr. and O. E. Wasyliw,
13(4): 407-15, 1985
Vol. 14, 1986
False accusations of physical and sexual abuse.
D. C. Schuman,
14(1): 5-21, 1986
Incompetent misdemeanants--pseudocivil commitment.
S. Rachlin, C. L. Stokman and S. Grossman,
14(1): 23-30, 1986
Medical students as child abusers.
J. M. Kaplan,
14(1): 31-6, 1986
Ethics and the psychiatric determination of competency to be executed.
M. L. Radelet and G. W. Barnard,
14(1): 37-53, 1986
Violence against animals and people: is aggression against living creatures
generalized?
A. R. Felthous and S. R. Kellert,
14(1): 55-69, 1986
A methodology for predicting the effects of changes in civil commitment decision
making.
L. R. Faulkner, B. H. McFarland, J. D. Bloom and T. O. Stern,
14(1): 71-80, 1986
The impact of parental homosexuality in child custody cases: a review of the
literature.
D. J. Kleber, R. J. Howell and A. L. Tibbits-Kleber,
14(1): 81-7, 1986
The role of the psychiatrist in evaluating a prison mental health system in
litigation.
J. L. Metzner and S. L. Dubovsky,
14(1): 89-95, 1986
Medication noncompliance in schizophrenia: codification and update.
J. L. Young, H. V. Zonana and L. Shepler,
14(2): 105-22, 1986
The multidimensional assessment of dangerousness: competence assessment in
patient care and liability prevention.
T. G. Gutheil, H. Bursztajn and A. Brodsky,
14(2): 123-9, 1986
Victims and families of violent psychiatric patients.
R. L. Binder and D. E. McNeil,
14(2): 131-9, 1986
The relationship between verdict, defendant characteristics, and type of crime
in sex-related criminal cases.
J. C. Beck, N. Borenstein and J. Dreyfus,
14(2): 141-6, 1986
Interview, diagnostic, and legal aspects in the forensic psychiatric assessments
of deaf persons.
B. Harry,
14(2): 147-62, 1986
Problems of long-term informed consent.
R. Jaffe,
14(2): 163-9, 1986
The age of sexual consent.
R. F. Kourany, R. Y. Hill and M. H. Hollender,
14(2): 171-6, 1986
Fathers and sons: some effects of prolonged custody litigation.
L. Loeb,
14(2): 177-83, 1986
Two year's experience under Utah's mens rea insanity law.
P. Heinbecker,
14(2): 185-91, 1986
Perceptions of psychiatric testimony: a historical perspective on the hysterical
invective.
P. J. Resnick,
14(3): 203-19, 1986
Therapists' obligations to report their patients' criminal acts.
P. S. Appelbaum and A. Meisel,
14(3): 221-30, 1986
Evaluation and treatment of insanity acquittees in the community.
J. D. Bloom, M. H. Williams, J. L. Rogers and P. Barbur,
14(3): 231-44, 1986
Psychiatric injury in women's workplaces.
B. Bursten,
14(3): 245-51, 1986
When it pays to be insane: three unusual legacies of insanity.
R. L. Goldstein,
14(3): 253-62, 1986
Compensation neurosis.
H. C. Modlin,
14(3): 263-71, 1986
Civil commitment to outpatient psychotherapy: a case study.
K. Schneider-Braus,
14(3): 273-9, 1986
Lasting rights and last rites: a case report.
P. Rodenhauser,
14(3): 281-6, 1986
Forensic child psychiatry: an emerging subspecialty.
E. P. Benedek,
14(4): 295-300, 1986
Developmental competency.
S. B. Billick,
14(4): 301-9, 1986
Competency to be a witness: a major child forensic issue.
K. M. Quinn,
14(4): 311-21, 1986
Relitigation after contested custody and visitation evaluations.
P. Ash and M. J. Guyer,
14(4): 323-30, 1986
Psychiatric aspects of sexual abuse.
A. R. Abright,
14(4): 331-43, 1986
Filicidal abuse in the histories of 15 condemned murderers.
M. Feldman, K. Mallouh and D. O. Lewis,
14(4): 345-52, 1986
The forensic evaluation and treatment of children: ethics and values.
H. L. Morrison,
14(4): 353-9, 1986
Should adult psychiatrists be doing child custody evaluations?
M. G. Goldzband,
14(4): 361-7, 1986
Vol. 15, 1987
Treatment refusal among forensic inpatients.
J. T. Young, J. D. Bloom, L. R. Faulkner, J. L. Rogers and P. K. Pati,
15(1): 5-13, 1987
In the wake of Ake: the ethics of expert testimony in an advocate's world.
P. S. Appelbaum,
15(1): 15-25, 1987
Joint custody: a comprehensive review.
A. L. Tibbits-Kleber, R. J. Howell and D. J. Kleber,
15(1): 27-43, 1987
Disputed child custody: strategies and issues in mediation.
T. W. Miller and L. J. Veltkamp,
15(1): 45-56, 1987
What constitutes a psychiatric emergency: clinical and legal dimensions.
M. S. Swartz,
15(1): 57-68, 1987
Legal incompetents' need for guardians in Florida.
W. C. Schmidt and R. Peters,
15(1): 69-83, 1987
Competency to stand trial: a conceptual model for its proper assessment.
S. L. Drob, R. H. Berger and H. C. Weinstein,
15(1): 85-94, 1987
The twilight zone between scientific certainty and legal sufficiency: should a
jury determine the causation of schizophrenia?
R. L. Goldstein,
15(1): 95-104, 1987
Liability of treaters for injuries to others: erosion of three immunities.
A. R. Felthous,
15(2): 115-25, 1987
Civil commitment by conservatorship: the workings of California's law.
J. L. Young, M. J. Mills and R. L. Sack,
15(2): 127-39, 1987
Military combat, posttraumatic stress disorder, and criminal behavior in Vietnam
veterans.
L. F. Sparr, M. E. Reaves and R. M. Atkinson,
15(2): 141-62, 1987
The right to refuse treatment under Rogers v. Commissioner: preliminary
empirical findings and comparisons.
S. K. Hoge, T. G. Gutheil and E. Kaplan,
15(2): 163-9, 1987
Tattoos, body experience, and body image boundary among violent male offenders.
B. Harry,
15(2): 171-8, 1987
The duty to warn/protect: issues in clinical practice.
R. J. Carlson, L. C. Friedman and S. C. Riggert,
15(2): 179-86, 1987
An evaluation of procedures for assessing competency to stand trial.
J. Schreiber, R. Roesch and S. Golding,
15(2): 187-203, 1987
Psychiatric testimony in "cult" litigation.
D. T. Lunde and H. A. Sigal,
15(2): 205-10, 1987
The forensic psychiatrist of the future.
P. E. Dietz,
15(3): 217-27, 1987
"Crudely, without any finesse": the defendant hears his psychiatric evaluation.
L. H. Strasburger,
15(3): 229-33, 1987
Defining a clinically useful model for assessing competence to consent to
treatment.
L. Hipshman,
15(3): 235-45, 1987
Testamentary capacity.
F. C. Redmond,
15(3): 247-56, 1987
Pastoral counseling and the concept of malpractice.
E. E. Griffith and J. L. Young,
15(3): 257-65, 1987
More forensic romances: De Clerambault's syndrome in men.
R. L. Goldstein,
15(3): 267-74, 1987
Death notification.
S. Eth, D. A. Baron and R. S. Pynoos,
15(3): 275-81, 1987
Patient warnings in court-ordered evaluations of children and families.
R. Barnum, J. Silverberg and D. Nied,
15(3): 283-300, 1987
Mutism, malingering, and competency to stand trial.
A. E. Daniel and P. J. Resnick,
15(3): 301-8, 1987
Health law and mental health law courses in US medical schools.
A. R. Felthous and R. D. Miller,
15(4): 319-27, 1987
The insanity defense: asking and answering the ultimate question.
J. R. Ciccone and C. Clements,
15(4): 329-38, 1987
Development of a computerized sexual assessment laboratory.
G. W. Barnard, L. Robbins, D. Tingle, T. Shaw and G. Newman,
15(4): 339-47, 1987
The life histories and psychological profiles of 59 incestuous stepfathers.
W. D. Erickson, N. H. Walbek and R. K. Seely,
15(4): 349-57, 1987
Methodology for the analysis of civil commitment detention times and costs.
L. R. Faulkner, B. H. McFarland, J. D. Bloom and T. O. Stern,
15(4): 359-70, 1987
Evaluation of competency to stand trial in defendants who do not want to be
defended against the crimes charged.
R. D. Miller and E. J. Germain,
15(4): 371-9, 1987
The judge's view of competency evaluations. II.
H. Owens, R. Rosner and R. B. Harmon,
15(4): 381-9, 1987
The Supreme Court and the mentally disabled criminal defendant: recent
developments.
M. L. Perlin,
15(4): 391-409, 1987
Vol. 16, 1988
The influence of the right to refuse treatment on precommitment patients.
J. D. Bloom, M. H. Williams, S. L. Godard and L. R. Faulkner,
16(1): 5-9, 1988
Disposition of insanity acquittees in Illinois.
R. M. Wettstein and E. P. Mulvey,
16(1): 11-24, 1988
From impartial expert to adversary in the wake of Ake.
S. Rachlin,
16(1): 25-33, 1988
Insanity plea: predicting not guilty by reason of insanity adjudications.
R. W. Jeffrey, R. A. Pasewark and S. Bieber,
16(1): 35-9, 1988
Guilty but mentally ill: the South Carolina experience.
D. W. Morgan, T. M. McCullough, P. L. Jenkins and W. M. White,
16(1): 41-8, 1988
United States v. Lyons: toward a new conception of legal insanity.
D. Mossman,
16(1): 49-58, 1988
Informed consent issues in the cardiac transplantation evaluation.
B. Myers and W. F. Kuhn,
16(1): 59-66, 1988
Current issues in state mental health forensic programs.
S. H. Nelson and V. F. Berger,
16(1): 67-75, 1988
HELP: an educational forensic psychiatric assessment program.
F. A. Jensen and C. D. Webster,
16(1): 77-85, 1988
Violence in our society.
S. H. Frazier,
16(2): 97-9, 1988
Congenital determinants of violence.
S. A. Mednick and E. S. Kandel,
16(2): 101-9, 1988
The medical model versus the just deserts model.
M. E. Wolfgang,
16(2): 111-21, 1988
A judge's three worlds: proof, philosophy, and the prison.
E. B. Spaeth, Jr.,
16(2): 123-30, 1988
Violence: a product of biosocial interactions.
F. A. Elliott,
16(2): 131-43, 1988
Violence. Roots and remedies: the perspective of the forensic psychiatrist.
R. L. Sadoff,
16(2): 145-52, 1988
Multiple paraphilic diagnoses among sex offenders.
G. G. Abel, J. V. Becker, J. Cunningham-Rathner, M. Mittelman and J. L.
Rouleau,
16(2): 153-68, 1988
Validating the components of a taxonomic system for rapists: a path analytic
approach.
R. Rosenberg, R. A. Knight, R. A. Prentky and A. Lee,
16(2): 169-85, 1988
Antisocial personality and substance abuse disorders.
J. J. Collins, W. E. Schlenger and B. K. Jordan,
16(2): 187-98, 1988
Assessment of competency for execution? A guide for mental health professionals.
K. S. Heilbrun and H. A. McClaren,
16(3): 205-16, 1988
Advisability of substance abuse testing in parents who severely maltreat their
children: the issue of drug testing before the juvenile/family courts.
R. Famularo, G. Spivak, D. Bunshaft and J. Berkson,
16(3): 217-23, 1988
Psychiatrists in the hot seat: discrediting doctors by impeachment of their
credibility.
R. L. Goldstein,
16(3): 225-34, 1988
The use and abuse of erection measurements: a forensic perspective.
S. Travin, K. Cullen and J. T. Melella,
16(3): 235-50, 1988
Command hallucinations and criminality: a clinical quandary.
R. Rogers, D. Nussbaum and R. Gillis,
16(3): 251-8, 1988
Functionalism: the penumbra of psychiatric diagnoses.
W. Bromberg,
16(3): 259-68, 1988
Investigatory independence in child sexual abuse evaluations: conceptual
considerations.
S. White and K. M. Quinn,
16(3): 269-78, 1988
Drug treatment refusal and length of hospitalization of insanity acquittees.
M. H. Williams, J. D. Bloom, L. R. Faulkner, J. L. Rogers and S. L. Godard,
16(3): 279-84, 1988
Treating those found incompetent for execution: ethical chaos with only one
solution.
M. L. Radelet and G. W. Barnard,
16(4): 297-308, 1988
Emerging problems for staff associated with the release of potentially dangerous
forensic patients.
R. D. Miller, D. M. Doren, G. Van Rybroek and G. J. Maier,
16(4): 309-20, 1988
Relationships between legal and clinical factors among forensic hospital
patients.
P. Rodenhauser and H. J. Khamis,
16(4): 321-32, 1988
Lifetime and six-month prevalence of psychiatric disorders among sentenced
female offenders.
A. E. Daniel, A. J. Robins, J. C. Reid and D. E. Wilfley,
16(4): 333-42, 1988
Fostering permanency of children in out-of-home care: psycho-legal aspects.
M. J. Fialkov,
16(4): 343-57, 1988
The psychiatrist's guide to right and wrong: judicial standards of wrongfulness
since M'Naghten.
R. L. Goldstein and M. Rotter,
16(4): 359-67, 1988
"Magical thinking," suicide, and malpractice litigation.
H. Bursztajn, T. G. Gutheil, A. Brodsky and E. L. Swagerty,
16(4): 369-77, 1988
Vol. 17, 1989
Capgras syndrome and dangerousness.
J. A. Silva, G. B. Leong, R. Weinstock and C. L. Boyer,
17(1): 5-14, 1989
Investigators' and judges' opinions about civil commitment.
B. H. McFarland, L. R. Faulkner, J. D. Bloom, R. J. Hallaux and J. D. Bray,
17(1): 15-24, 1989
The diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders in the courts.
D. W. Shuman,
17(1): 25-32, 1989
An HIV-infected psychiatric patient: some clinicolegal dilemmas.
J. A. Silva, G. B. Leong and R. Weinstock,
17(1): 33-43, 1989
Influences of an interviewer's behaviors in child sexual abuse investigations.
K. M. Quinn, S. White and G. Santilli,
17(1): 45-52, 1989
Should forensic patients be informed of evaluators' opinions prior to trial?
R. D. Miller and E. J. Germain,
17(1): 53-9, 1989
The psychiatrist's guide to right and wrong: Part II: A systematic analysis of
exculpatory delusions.
R. L. Goldstein,
17(1): 61-7, 1989
Forensic psychiatry in private practice.
H. C. Modlin and A. Felthous,
17(1): 69-82, 1989
Silent suicide in the elderly.
R. I. Simon,
17(1): 83-95, 1989
The impact of the right to refuse treatment in a forensic patient population:
six-month review.
R. D. Miller, M. R. Bernstein, G. J. Van Rybroek and G. J. Maier,
17(2): 107-19, 1989
The psychiatrist's guide to right and wrong: Part III: Postpartum depression and
the "appreciation" of wrongfulness.
R. L. Goldstein,
17(2): 121-8, 1989
The New York State Insanity Defense Reform Act of 1980: a legislative
experiment.
D. S. McClellan,
17(2): 129-51, 1989
Sexual attraction to corpses: a psychiatric review of necrophilia.
J. P. Rosman and P. J. Resnick,
17(2): 153-63, 1989
Effects of a state law on rates of restraint on a child and adolescent unit.
C. Swett, Jr., A. S. Michaels and J. O. Cole,
17(2): 165-9, 1989
Spontaneous hypnosis in the forensic context.
J. O. Beahrs,
17(2): 171-81, 1989
Violence in geriatric patients with dementia.
E. Haller, R. L. Binder and D. E. McNiel,
17(2): 183-8, 1989
Perceptions of ethical problems by forensic psychiatrists.
R. Weinstock,
17(2): 189-202, 1989
Defendants pleading insanity: an analysis of outcome.
J. S. Janofsky, M. B. Vandewalle and J. R. Rappeport,
17(2): 203-11, 1989
Legal and ethical issues in the use of antiandrogens in treating sex offenders.
J. T. Melella, S. Travin and K. Cullen,
17(3): 223-32, 1989
The paraphilias and Depo-Provera: some medical, ethical and legal
considerations.
F. S. Berlin,
17(3): 233-9, 1989
The character of danger in psychiatric practice: are the mentally ill dangerous?
J. D. Bloom,
17(3): 241-55, 1989
Expert testimony in cult-related litigation.
J. L. Young and E. E. Griffith,
17(3): 257-67, 1989
The psychiatrist's guide to right and wrong: Part IV: The insanity defense and
the Ultimate Issue Rule.
R. L. Goldstein,
17(3): 269-81, 1989
Involuntary administration of medication in the community: the judicial
opportunity.
M. J. Schmidt and J. L. Geller,
17(3): 283-92, 1989
Female arsonists: a clinical study.
D. Bourget and J. M. Bradford,
17(3): 293-300, 1989
Behavioral science and the juvenile death penalty.
G. B. Leong and S. Eth,
17(3): 301-9, 1989
The differential impact of deinstitutionalization on white and nonwhite
defendants found incompetent to stand trial.
T. M. Arvanites,
17(3): 311-20, 1989
Forensic psychiatry: a subspecialty. The presidential address at the nineteenth
annual meeting of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law.
R. Rosner,
17(4): 323-33, 1989
Clinical evaluation of juvenile delinquents: who gets court referred?
R. Barnum, R. Famularo, D. Bunshaft, T. Fenton and S. Bolduc,
17(4): 335-44, 1989
The prediction of violent behavior during short-term civil commitment.
A. Kirk,
17(4): 345-53, 1989
Grandparents' legal rights to visitation in the fifty states and the District of
Columbia.
C. A. McCrimmon and R. J. Howell,
17(4): 355-66, 1989
Spying on psychiatrists: surreptitious surveillance of the forensic psychiatric
examination by the patient himself.
R. L. Goldstein,
17(4): 367-72, 1989
Simulation of brain damage: assessment and decision rules.
O. E. Wasyliw and J. L. Cavanaugh, Jr.,
17(4): 373-86, 1989
Follow-up after release of insanity acquittees, mentally disordered offenders,
and convicted felons.
S. B. Silver, M. I. Cohen and M. K. Spodak,
17(4): 387-400, 1989
Returning the not guilty by reason of insanity to the community: a new scale to
determine readiness.
H. R. Eisner,
17(4): 401-13, 1989
Forensic pitfalls.
H. C. Modlin,
17(4): 415-9, 1989
Vol. 18, 1990
The fusion of medicine and law for in extremis health and medical decisions:
does it produce energy and light or just cosmic debris?
J. W. Bellacosa,
18(1): 5-21, 1990
Depression in homicidal adolescents.
C. P. Malmquist,
18(1): 23-36, 1990
Threats and assaults against psychiatrists.
L. R. Faulkner, N. R. Grimm, B. H. McFarland and J. D. Bloom,
18(1): 37-46, 1990
DSM-III diagnoses and offenses in committed female juvenile delinquents.
W. C. Myers, R. C. Burket, W. B. Lyles, L. Stone and J. P. Kemph,
18(1): 47-54, 1990
Victims of fraud: comparing victims of white collar and violent crime.
L. Ganzini, B. McFarland and J. Bloom,
18(1): 55-63, 1990
Civil commitment: a range of patient attitudes.
G. A. Edelsohn and V. A. Hiday,
18(1): 65-77, 1990
Women who molest children.
E. L. Rowan, J. B. Rowan and P. Langelier,
18(1): 79-83, 1990
A study of families in high-conflict custody disputes: effects of psychiatric
evaluation.
V. A. Simons, L. S. Grossman and B. J. Weiner,
18(1): 85-97, 1990
American forensic psychiatrists who work in state institutions.
B. Harry, G. J. Maier and R. D. Miller,
18(1): 99-106, 1990
Part I: The NGRI Registry: initial analyses of data collected on Connecticut
insanity acquittees.
H. V. Zonana, J. A. Wells, M. A. Getz and J. Buchanan,
18(2): 115-28, 1990
Part II: Sex differences in persons found not guilty by reason of insanity:
analysis of data from the Connecticut NGRI Registry.
H. V. Zonana, R. L. Bartel, J. A. Wells, J. A. Buchanan and M. A. Getz,
18(2): 129-42, 1990
"False confessions" and identification with the aggressor: another forensic
misuse of a psychiatric concept.
I. N. Perr,
18(2): 143-51, 1990
Forensic psychiatry and malpractice.
H. C. Modlin,
18(2): 153-62, 1990
The sexually sadistic criminal and his offenses.
P. E. Dietz, R. R. Hazelwood and J. Warren,
18(2): 163-78, 1990
Treatment of sex offenders with Depo-Provera.
T. A. Kiersch,
18(2): 179-87, 1990
Legal duties of psychiatric patients.
J. O. Beahrs,
18(2): 189-202, 1990
Right to refuse treatment: impact of Rivers v. Katz.
J. R. Ciccone, J. F. Tokoli, C. D. Clements and T. E. Gift,
18(2): 203-15, 1990
The trial of Abner Baker, Jr., MD: monomania and McNaughtan rules in antebellum
America.
R. White,
18(3): 223-34, 1990
Who's afraid of forensic psychiatry?
R. D. Miller,
18(3): 235-47, 1990
Axis I and Axis II diagnostic parameters of homicide.
R. M. Yarvis,
18(3): 249-69, 1990
Co-occurring mental disorders among criminal offenders.
G. Cote and S. Hodgins,
18(3): 271-81, 1990
Posttraumatic stress disorder in tort actions: forensic minefield.
L. F. Sparr and J. K. Boehnlein,
18(3): 283-302, 1990
Disposition of insanity acquittees in the United States Military.
R. G. Lande,
18(3): 303-9, 1990
Prearraignment forensic evaluation: the odyssey moves east of the Pecos.
R. D. Miller,
18(3): 311-21, 1990
Development of a new classificatory model of malingering.
R. Rogers,
18(3): 323-33, 1990
Thoughts for the next 20 years.
W. H. Reid,
18(4): 343-7, 1990
AIDS-related dementia and competency to stand trial: a potential abuse of the
forensic mental health system?
M. L. Perlin and J. A. Dvoskin,
18(4): 349-63, 1990
Suicide cases in civil law: do the legal tests make sense?
M. McClung,
18(4): 365-72, 1990
The emergency petition process in Maryland.
G. Jayaram, J. S. Janofsky and P. J. Fischer,
18(4): 373-8, 1990
Mandatory reporting of sexually exploitative psychotherapists.
L. H. Strasburger, L. Jorgenson and R. Randles,
18(4): 379-84, 1990
Criminal defendants who desire punishment.
K. L. Appelbaum,
18(4): 385-91, 1990
A comparison of civil patients and incompetent defendants: pre and post
deinstitutionalization.
T. M. Arvanites,
18(4): 393-403, 1990
Post-Hinckley insanity reform in Oregon.
S. M. Reichlin, J. D. Bloom and M. H. Williams,
18(4): 405-12, 1990
Self-incrimination and denial in the juvenile transfer evaluation.
R. Barnum,
18(4): 413-27, 1990
Vol. 19, 1991
The presentation of expert testimony via live audio-visual communication.
R. D. Miller,
19(1): 5-20, 1991
Rethinking the DSM III-R diagnosis of antisocial personality disorder.
R. Rogers and K. Dion,
19(1): 21-31, 1991
The impact of judicial review of patients' refusal to accept antipsychotic
medications at the Minnesota Security Hospital.
M. G. Farnsworth,
19(1): 33-42, 1991
Paraphilias in U.S. pornography titles: "pornography made me do it" (Ted Bundy).
B. Lebegue,
19(1): 43-8, 1991
Physician staffing and patient violence.
H. Carmel, E. D. Tanke and J. A. Yesavage,
19(1): 49-51, 1991
Effective representation of children by the guardian ad litem: an empirical
investigation.
A. B. Sivan and M. Quigley-Rick,
19(1): 53-61, 1991
Criminal offense, psychiatric diagnosis, and psycholegal opinion: an analysis of
894 pretrial referrals.
J. I. Warren, W. L. Fitch, P. E. Dietz and B. D. Rosenfeld,
19(1): 63-9, 1991
The diagnosis of intermittent explosive disorder in violent men.
A. R. Felthous, S. G. Bryant, C. B. Wingerter and E. Barratt,
19(1): 71-9, 1991
Volition, deception, and the evolution of justice.
J. O. Beahrs,
19(1): 81-93, 1991
Understanding due discretion of judgment in Catholic marriage courts.
J. L. Young and E. E. Griffith,
19(2): 109-18, 1991
Unconscious fantasies: from the couch to the court.
H. Bloom and G. A. Awad,
19(2): 119-30, 1991
Morality and pretextuality, psychiatry and law: of "ordinary common sense,"
heuristic reasoning, and cognitive dissonance.
M. L. Perlin,
19(2): 131-50, 1991
Is money a cure? Follow-up of litigants in England.
R. L. Binder, M. R. Trimble and D. E. McNiel,
19(2): 151-60, 1991
A controlled comparison of involuntarily hospitalized medication refusers and
acceptors.
S. Levin, J. S. Brekke and P. Thomas,
19(2): 161-71, 1991
Antisocial burnout: an exploratory study.
J. Arboleda-Florez and H. L. Holley,
19(2): 173-83, 1991
Type of symptomatology as a form of volunteer bias.
A. Convit, S. Levine, S. Berns and C. Evangelista,
19(2): 185-91, 1991
The military insanity defense.
R. G. Lande,
19(2): 193-201, 1991
Crime and multiple personality disorder: a case history and discussion.
I. N. Perr,
19(2): 203-14, 1991
The demographic and psychiatric characteristics of 110 personal injury
litigants.
B. F. Hoffman,
19(3): 227-36, 1991
Opinions by AAPL forensic psychiatrists on controversial ethical guidelines: a
survey [published erratum appears in Bull Am Acad Psychiatry Law
1991;19(4):393].
R. Weinstock, G. B. Leong, J. A. Silva and G. B. Leong,
19(3): 237-48, 1991
Perry v. Louisiana: can a state treat an incompetent prisoner to ready him for
execution?
G. L. Evans,
19(3): 249-70, 1991
Medical and judicial perceptions of the risks associated with use of
antipsychotic medication.
H. Bursztajn, B. Chanowitz, E. Kaplan, T. G. Gutheil, R. M. Hamm and V.
Alexander,
19(3): 271-5, 1991
Just say no to the charges against you: alcohol intoxication, mental capacity,
and criminal responsibility.
R. T. Watterson,
19(3): 277-90, 1991
Women clinicians and patient assaults.
R. L. Binder,
19(3): 291-6, 1991
Estimating mental health needs and service utilization among prison inmates.
H. J. Steadman, E. J. Holohean, Jr. and J. Dvoskin,
19(3): 297-307, 1991
Psychiatrists injured by patient attack.
H. Carmel and M. Hunter,
19(3): 309-16, 1991
The volume and characteristics of insanity defense pleas: an eight-state study.
L. A. Callahan, H. J. Steadman, M. A. McGreevy and P. C. Robbins,
19(4): 331-8, 1991
Recent developments in the transracial adoption debate.
E. E. Griffith and J. L. Duby,
19(4): 339-50, 1991
Involuntary patients' right to refuse medication: impact of the Riese decision
on a California inpatient unit.
R. L. Binder and D. E. McNiel,
19(4): 351-7, 1991
Court based civil commitment of alcoholics and substance abusers.
E. A. Beane and J. C. Beck,
19(4): 359-66, 1991
Competency to stand trial: description and initial evaluation of a new
computer-assisted assessment tool (CADCOMP).
G. W. Barnard, J. W. Thompson, Jr., W. C. Freeman, L. Robbins, D. Gies and
G. C. Hankins,
19(4): 367-81, 1991
Beyond cognition: the role of disordered affective states in impairing
competence to consent to treatment.
H. J. Bursztajn, H. P. Harding, Jr., T. G. Gutheil and A. Brodsky,
19(4): 383-8, 1991
Mentally disordered offenders in Sweden.
L. Lidberg and H. Belfrage,
19(4): 389-93, 1991
Informed consent in the electroconvulsive treatment of geriatric patients.
S. B. Levine, K. Blank, H. I. Schwartz and D. S. Rait,
19(4): 395-403, 1991
Forensic psychiatric inpatients served in the United States: regional and system
differences.
B. B. Way, J. A. Dvoskin and H. J. Steadman,
19(4): 405-12, 1991
Vol. 20, 1992
The plethysmograph: a review of recent literature [see comments].
J. G. Barker and R. J. Howell,
20(1): 13-25, 1992
The Mickey Finn defense: involuntary intoxication and insanity.
R. L. Goldstein,
20(1): 27-31, 1992
Children of incarcerated and criminal parents: adjustment, behavior, and
prognosis.
S. Gabel,
20(1): 33-45, 1992
What treatments do we have for children and adolescents who have killed?
W. C. Myers,
20(1): 47-58, 1992
Micro-effects of language on risk perception in drug prescribing behavior.
H. J. Bursztajn, B. Chanowitz, T. G. Gutheil and R. M. Hamm,
20(1): 59-66, 1992
Accuracy and expert testimony.
S. K. Hoge and T. Grisso,
20(1): 67-76, 1992
The dangerousness of persons with misidentification syndromes.
J. A. Silva, G. B. Leong and R. Weinstock,
20(1): 77-86, 1992
Predicting success on conditional release for insanity acquittees: regionalized
versus nonregionalized hospital patients.
C. Tellefsen, M. I. Cohen, S. B. Silver and C. Dougherty,
20(1): 87-100, 1992
Improvements in the M test as a screening measure for malingering.
R. Rogers, M. Bagby and J. R. Gillis,
20(1): 101-4, 1992
A memorial issue to Bernard L. Diamond.
Anonymous,
20(2): 111-236, 1992
In memoriam: Bernard L. Diamond December 8, 1912-November 18, 1990.
J. Satten,
20(2): 113-8, 1992
The forensic psychiatrist: consultant versus activist in legal doctrine.
B. L. Diamond,
20(2): 119-32, 1992
A personal view of the ethics and values of Bernard L. Diamond.
J. M. Quen,
20(2): 133-9, 1992
"The Fallacy of the Impartial Expert" revisited.
J. Katz,
20(2): 141-52, 1992
Forensic psychiatry: the need for self-regulation.
P. S. Appelbaum,
20(2): 153-62, 1992
Professional versus personal ethics: methods for system reform?
R. D. Miller,
20(2): 163-77, 1992
Diminished capacity as an alternative to McNaghten in California law.
W. Bromberg,
20(2): 179-83, 1992
"Therapist-patient sex syndrome": the perils of nomenclature for the forensic
psychiatrist.
T. G. Gutheil,
20(2): 185-90, 1992
"A terror to their neighbors": beliefs about mental disorder and violence in
historical and cultural perspective.
J. Monahan,
20(2): 191-5, 1992
The death penalty and Bernard Diamond's approach to forensic psychiatry.
R. Weinstock, G. B. Leong and J. A. Silva,
20(2): 197-210, 1992
The evolution of legal methods for dealing with mind-state in crimes.
A. S. Watson,
20(2): 211-20, 1992
Clinical assessment of the voluntariness of behavior.
S. L. Halleck,
20(2): 221-36, 1992
Depo provera treatment for sex offending behavior: an evaluation of outcome.
W. J. d. Meyer, C. Cole and E. Emory,
20(3): 249-59, 1992
Incompetence, treatment refusal, and hospitalization.
J. C. Beck and J. W. Parry,
20(3): 261-7, 1992
Treatment boundary violations: clinical, ethical, and legal considerations
[published errata appear in Bull Am Acad Psychiatry Law 1992;20(4):504 and
1994;22(1):132].
R. I. Simon,
20(3): 269-88, 1992
Approaches to forensic assessment of false claims of sexual misconduct by
therapists.
T. G. Gutheil,
20(3): 289-96, 1992
The impact of clozapine on 25 forensic patients.
G. J. Maier,
20(3): 297-307, 1992
Collision between law and ethics: consent for treatment with adolescents.
J. M. Shields and A. Johnson,
20(3): 309-23, 1992
The occupational hazards of jury duty.
S. M. Kaplan and C. Winget,
20(3): 325-33, 1992
The Tarasoff raid: a new extension of the duty to protect.
R. L. Goldstein and J. M. Calderone,
20(3): 335-42, 1992
Peer review of psychiatric expert testimony. American Psychiatric Association's
Council on Psychiatry and Law.
Anonymous,
20(3): 343-52, 1992
Prohibiting lawyer-client sex.
T. Gutheil, L. Jorgenson and P. Sutherland,
20(4): 365-82, 1992
Asbestos exposure and psychic injury--a review of 48 claims.
I. N. Perr,
20(4): 383-93, 1992
Grievances and law suits against public mental health professionals: cost of
doing business?
R. D. Miller,
20(4): 395-408, 1992
Sexual harassment: issues for forensic psychiatrists.
R. L. Binder,
20(4): 409-18, 1992
On the duty to protect: an evolutionary perspective.
T. J. Rudegeair and P. S. Appelbaum,
20(4): 419-26, 1992
Tarasoff and the dangerous driver: a look at the driving cases.
R. W. Pettis,
20(4): 427-37, 1992
Child sexual abuse and forensic psychiatry: evolving and controversial issues.
K. Burton and W. C. Myers,
20(4): 439-53, 1992
Legal aspects of clinical care for severely mentally ill, homeless persons.
P. S. Appelbaum,
20(4): 455-73, 1992
The treatment of mentally disordered offenders: a national survey of
psychiatrists.
K. Heilbrun, C. E. Nunez, M. A. Deitchman, D. Gustafson and K. Krull,
20(4): 475-80, 1992
The use of psychiatric diagnoses in the legal process: task force report of the
American Psychiatric Association.
S. L. Halleck, S. K. Hoge, R. D. Miller, R. L. Sadoff and N. H. Halleck,
20(4): 481-99, 1992
Vol. 21, 1993
An agenda for quality improvement in forensic mental health consultation.
R. Barnum,
21(1): 5-21, 1993
Post-traumatic stress disorder and the law: critical review of the new frontier.
A. A. Stone,
21(1): 23-36, 1993
Psychophysiologic testing for post-traumatic stress disorder: forensic
psychiatric application.
R. K. Pitman and S. P. Orr,
21(1): 37-52, 1993
Appropriate short-term risk in psychiatry and the law.
J. O. Beahrs and J. L. Rogers,
21(1): 53-67, 1993
Multiple personality disorder: scientific and medicolegal issues.
S. H. Dinwiddie, C. S. North and S. H. Yutzy,
21(1): 69-79, 1993
Indochinese patients in the civil commitment process.
P. K. Leung, L. R. Faulkner, B. H. McFarland and C. Riley,
21(1): 81-9, 1993
Excluding personality disorders from the insanity defense--a follow-up study.
S. M. Reichlin, J. D. Bloom and M. H. Williams,
21(1): 91-100, 1993
The prisoner's prisoner: the theme of voluntary imprisonment in the staff of
correctional facilities.
R. A. Schultz-Ross,
21(1): 101-6, 1993
Rule-Out and Rule-In scales for the M test for malingering: a cross-validation.
G. P. Smith, R. Borum and J. A. Schinka,
21(1): 107-10, 1993
The validity of the M test in a residential forensic facility.
G. C. Hankins, G. W. Barnard and L. Robbins,
21(1): 111-21, 1993
The differences between forensic psychiatry and forensic psychology.
T. Grisso,
21(2): 133-45, 1993
Effects of professional affiliation on group therapists' confidentiality
attitudes and behaviors.
H. Roback, S. E. Purdon, E. Ochoa and F. Bloch,
21(2): 147-53, 1993
Major mental disorder and antisocial personality disorder: a criminal
combination.
S. Hodgins and G. Cote,
21(2): 155-60, 1993
The health care proxy for mental illness: can it work and should we want it to?
G. N. Sales,
21(2): 161-79, 1993
How bad is civil commitment? A study of attitudes toward violence and
involuntary hospitalization.
D. Mossman and K. J. Hart,
21(2): 181-94, 1993
Screening services in civil commitment of the mentally ill: an attempt to
balance individual liberties with needs for treatment.
U. Aviram,
21(2): 195-211, 1993
Memory processes in children: implications for investigations of alleged child
sexual abuse.
E. K. Johnson and R. J. Howell,
21(2): 213-26, 1993
Toward the therapeutic use of obscene language: a legal and clinical review.
G. J. Maier and R. D. Miller,
21(2): 227-43, 1993
The relationship between insight and control in obsessive-compulsive disorder:
implications for the insanity defense.
M. Rotter and W. Goodman,
21(2): 245-52, 1993
Misapplication of the Tarasoff duty to driving cases: a call for a reframing of
theory.
R. W. Pettis and T. G. Gutheil,
21(3): 263-75, 1993
First year of Maryland's new CRP statute in one state hospital.
D. D. Storch,
21(3): 277-80, 1993
The biases of child sexual abuse experts: believing is seeing.
T. M. Horner, M. J. Guyer and N. M. Kalter,
21(3): 281-92, 1993
Report of the task force on consent to voluntary hospitalization.
F. Cournos, L. R. Faulkner, L. Fitzgerald, E. Griffith, M. R. Munetz and B.
Winick,
21(3): 293-307, 1993
Informed decision making in persons acquitted not guilty by reason of insanity.
R. L. Elliott, E. Nelson, W. L. Fitch, R. Scott, G. Wolber and R. Singh,
21(3): 309-20, 1993
Patient choice: deciding between psychotropic medication and physical restraints
in an emergency.
Y. Sheline and T. Nelson,
21(3): 321-9, 1993
Asbestos exposure and posttraumatic stress disorder.
I. N. Perr,
21(3): 331-44, 1993
Multiple personality disorder in criminal law.
M. Steinberg, J. Bancroft and J. Buchanan,
21(3): 345-56, 1993
The noncustodial parent and medical treatment.
W. Bernet,
21(3): 357-64, 1993
Pseudodementia and competency.
M. I. Good,
21(3): 365-70, 1993
Forensic psychiatry, its place and its promise.
W. Bromberg,
21(4): 383-8, 1993
An analysis of police referrals to 10 psychiatric emergency rooms.
B. B. Way, M. E. Evans and S. M. Banks,
21(4): 389-97, 1993
Young boys who commit serious sexual offenses: demographics, psychometrics, and
phenomenology.
J. A. Shaw, A. E. Campo-Bowen, B. Applegate, D. Perez, L. B. Antoine, E. L.
Hart, B. B. Lahey, R. J. Testa and A. Devaney,
21(4): 399-408, 1993
Juror stress: identification and intervention.
T. B. Feldmann and R. A. Bell,
21(4): 409-17, 1993
Substance abuse and the duty to protect.
A. R. Felthous,
21(4): 419-26, 1993
The adaptation to prison by individuals with schizophrenia.
D. W. Morgan, A. C. Edwards and L. R. Faulkner,
21(4): 427-33, 1993
Malignant sex and aggression: an overview of serial sexual homicide.
W. C. Myers, L. Reccoppa, K. Burton and R. McElroy,
21(4): 435-51, 1993
The role of psychiatry in death penalty defense.
J. C. Beck,
21(4): 453-63, 1993
Nonemergent forcible medication in an acute hospital.
W. M. Greenberg and S. Attia,
21(4): 465-73, 1993
Effects of publicity on a forensic hospital.
S. M. Reichlin and J. D. Bloom,
21(4): 475-83, 1993
Staff injuries from patient attack: five years' data.
H. Carmel and M. Hunter,
21(4): 485-93, 1993
Use of biographical and case history data in the assessment of malingering
during examination for disability.
R. I. Lanyon, E. R. Almer and P. J. Curran,
21(4): 495-503, 1993
The plethysmograph reconsidered: comments on Barker and Howell [comment].
W. T. Simon and P. G. Schouten,
21(4): 505-12, 1993
Dangerous delusions? Misidentification syndromes and professional negligence.
S. H. Dinwiddie and S. Yutzy,
21(4): 513-21, 1993
The psychological and legal aftermath of false arrest and imprisonment.
R. I. Simon,
21(4): 523-8, 1993
Involuntary medication of patients who are incompetent to stand trial: a
descriptive study of the New York experience with judicial review.
B. Ladds, A. Convit, J. Zito and J. Vitrai,
21(4): 529-45, 1993
Vol. 22, 1994
Child sexual abuse examinations: proposed guidelines for a standard of care.
P. H. Jenkins and R. J. Howell,
22(1): 5-17, 1994
Competency in adolescent inpatients.
K. C. Casimir and S. B. Billick,
22(1): 19-29, 1994
Noncompliance with family court mandated evaluations in a juvenile justice
clinic.
G. Kaplan, D. Pannullo, D. Brodzinsky and J. C. Hitt,
22(1): 31-8, 1994
Utilizing therapists to obtain death penalty verdicts.
R. Weinstock,
22(1): 39-52, 1994
Carbamazepine lowers aggression: a review.
J. L. Young and M. Hillbrand,
22(1): 53-61, 1994
Intermediate care programs for inmates with psychiatric disorders.
W. S. Condelli, J. A. Dvoskin and H. Holanchock,
22(1): 63-70, 1994
Work-related stress in American trial judges.
T. D. Eells and C. R. Showalter,
22(1): 71-83, 1994
Hospitalized insanity acquittees' level of functioning.
P. J. Shah, W. M. Greenberg and A. Convit,
22(1): 85-93, 1994
Psychiatry and the death penalty: the landmark Supreme Court cases and their
ethical implications for the profession.
E. J. Kermani and J. E. Kantor,
22(1): 95-108, 1994
Patient-therapist sexual involvement: a review of clinical and research data.
G. C. Hankins, M. I. Vera, G. W. Barnard and M. J. Herkov,
22(1): 109-26, 1994
The mock trial in psychiatric staff education.
S. Levine and H. Pinsker,
22(1): 127-32, 1994
Patterns of substance abuse and intoxication among murderers.
R. M. Yarvis,
22(1): 133-44, 1994
Causation, compulsion, and involuntariness.
S. J. Morse,
22(2): 159-80, 1994
An epidemiological study of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and major
depression in a male prison population.
L. L. Eyestone and R. J. Howell,
22(2): 181-93, 1994
Psychiatric diagnoses in sexual harassment cases.
B. L. Long,
22(2): 195-203, 1994
Veterans' psychiatric benefits: enter courts and attorneys.
L. F. Sparr, R. White, M. J. Friedman and D. B. Wiles,
22(2): 205-22, 1994
Dissociative identity disorder: adaptive deception of self and others.
J. O. Beahrs,
22(2): 223-37, 1994
The prosecution of violent psychiatric inpatients: one respectable intervention.
S. Rachlin,
22(2): 239-47, 1994
The right to refuse treatment: recent Canadian developments.
T. G. Gratzer and M. Matas,
22(2): 249-56, 1994
Personality disorders and 'restoration to sanity'.
H. C. Osran and L. E. Weinberger,
22(2): 257-67, 1994
Forensic psychiatry and the perturbation of psychiatrists' attention and
neutrality during psychotherapy.
R. I. Simon,
22(2): 269-77, 1994
Adequate evaluation of divorce-related child sexual abuse allegations.
A. P. Derdeyn, A. Poehailos and E. Seigle,
22(2): 279-87, 1994
Homeless mentally disordered defendants: competency to stand trial and mental
status findings.
D. A. Martell, R. Rosner and R. B. Harmon,
22(2): 289-95, 1994
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals: a new standard for scientific evidence
in the courts?
H. Zonana,
22(3): 309-25, 1994
Psychiatric genetics and forensic psychiatry: a review.
S. H. Dinwiddie,
22(3): 327-42, 1994
Washington State's unscientific approach to the problem of repeat sex offenders.
A. L. Brody and R. Green,
22(3): 343-56, 1994
Patterns of recall of childhood sexual abuse as described by adult survivors.
R. L. Binder, D. E. McNiel and R. L. Goldstone,
22(3): 357-66, 1994
Predicting treatment outcome for incompetent defendants.
R. A. Nicholson, G. W. Barnard, L. Robbins and G. Hankins,
22(3): 367-77, 1994
Beyond competence and sanity: the influence of pretrial evaluation on case
disposition.
J. I. Warren, B. Rosenfeld and W. L. Fitch,
22(3): 379-88, 1994
Factors associated with the diversion of mentally disordered offenders.
S. Davis,
22(3): 389-97, 1994
The use of third-party information in forensic assessments: a two-state
comparison.
K. Heilbrun, B. Rosenfeld, J. Warren and S. Collins,
22(3): 399-406, 1994
The misperceived duty to report patients' past crimes.
M. J. Goldman and T. G. Gutheil,
22(3): 407-10, 1994
Racial differences in the criminalization of the mentally ill.
P. M. Grekin, R. Jemelka and E. W. Trupin,
22(3): 411-20, 1994
Inpatient seclusion: description and causes.
C. Swett,
22(3): 421-30, 1994
On being 'too crazy' to sign into a mental hospital: the issue of consent to
psychiatric hospitalization.
S. K. Hoge,
22(3): 431-50, 1994
Mental health screening and evaluation within prisons.
J. L. Metzner, R. D. Miller and D. Kleinsasser,
22(3): 451-7, 1994
Medical liability claims and lawsuits filed against the University of Texas
System involving adult psychiatric patients.
K. D. Wagner, R. Pollard, R. F. Wagner, Jr. and M. D. Shifren,
22(3): 459-69, 1994
Preventing jailhouse suicides.
A. R. Felthous,
22(4): 477-88, 1994
The Munchausen syndrome in civil forensic psychiatry.
J. S. Janofsky,
22(4): 489-97, 1994
Munchausen syndrome by proxy in false allegations of child sexual abuse: legal
implications.
L. H. Barker and R. J. Howell,
22(4): 499-510, 1994
Transsexualism and the law.
R. Green,
22(4): 511-7, 1994
Involuntary medication of patients who are incompetent to stand trial: a review
of empirical studies.
B. Ladds and A. Convit,
22(4): 519-32, 1994
Clinical vampirism: blending myth and reality.
P. D. Jaffe and F. DiCataldo,
22(4): 533-44, 1994
Staff gender and risk of assault on doctors and nurses.
R. L. Binder and D. E. McNiel,
22(4): 545-50, 1994
Community placement for insanity acquittees: a preliminary study of residential
programs and person-situation fit.
K. Heilbrun, K. Lawson, S. Spier and J. Libby,
22(4): 551-60, 1994
Guide to identifying and correcting decision making errors in mental disability
practice.
J. Rabinowitz,
22(4): 561-75, 1994
The patient self-determination act and psychiatric care.
S. K. Hoge,
22(4): 577-86, 1994
An analogue study of the factors influencing competency decisions.
R. K. Blashfield, L. Robbins and G. W. Barnard,
22(4): 587-94, 1994
Medication refusal--clinical picture and outcome after use of administrative
review.
G. Urrutia,
22(4): 595-603, 1994
Factors associated with dangerous behavior in forensic inpatients: results from
a pilot study.
E. M. Ball, D. Young, L. A. Dotson, L. T. Brothers and D. Robbins,
22(4): 605-20, 1994
Psychiatric stigma in correctional facilities.
R. D. Miller and J. L. Metzner,
22(4): 621-8, 1994
Vol. 23, 1995
Crime and memory.
J. L. Herman,
23(1): 5-17, 1995
Medroxyprogesterone treatment for paraphiliacs.
H. M. Kravitz, T. W. Haywood, J. Kelly, C. Wahlstrom, S. Liles and J. L.
Cavanaugh, Jr.,
23(1): 19-33, 1995
Examination of treatment completion and predicted outcome among incarcerated sex
offenders.
T. A. Shaw, M. J. Herkov and R. A. Greer,
23(1): 35-41, 1995
The long-term outcome of antisocial personality disorder compared with
depression, schizophrenia, and surgical conditions.
D. W. Black, C. H. Baumgard and S. E. Bell,
23(1): 43-52, 1995
Psychiatric factors associated with dangerous misidentification delusions.
J. A. Silva, G. B. Leong, R. Weinstock and R. L. Klein,
23(1): 53-61, 1995
Infantophilia--a new subcategory of pedophilia?: a preliminary study.
D. M. Greenberg, J. Bradford and S. Curry,
23(1): 63-71, 1995
Axis I and personality comorbidity in adolescents with conduct disorder.
R. C. Burket and W. C. Myers,
23(1): 73-82, 1995
Teaching forensic psychiatry to psychiatric residents.
M. K. Marrocco, J. C. Uecker and J. R. Ciccone,
23(1): 83-91, 1995
Public evaluations of unrepresented defendants.
R. D. Miller, J. Olin, G. Beven and J. Covey,
23(1): 93-103, 1995
Countertransference in conflict: one client or two?
J. K. Hill,
23(1): 105-16, 1995
Interaction of the criminal justice system and psychiatric professionals in
which civil commitment standards are prohibitive.
P. Solomon, R. Rogers, J. Draine and A. Meyerson,
23(1): 117-28, 1995
Medical ethics, cultural values, and physician participation in lethal
injection.
J. K. Boehnlein, R. M. Parker, R. M. Arnold, C. F. Bosk and L. F. Sparr,
23(1): 129-34, 1995
Using science to influence the Supreme Court on the right to refuse treatment:
amicus curiae briefs in Washington v. Harper.
H. I. Schwartz and R. Boland,
23(1): 135-46, 1995
Violence, sensation seeking, and impulsivity in schizophrenics found unfit to
stand trial.
S. Z. Kaliski and T. Zabow,
23(1): 147-55, 1995
The psychological autopsy: a useful tool for determining proximate causation in
suicide cases.
D. Jacobs and M. Klein-Benheim,
23(2): 165-82, 1995
Is liability possible for forensic psychiatrists?
R. Weinstock and T. Garrick,
23(2): 183-93, 1995
A history of subspecialization in forensic psychiatry.
S. E. Prentice,
23(2): 195-203, 1995
Predictors of returning to work.
P. Ash and S. I. Goldstein,
23(2): 205-10, 1995
After the ADA: service dogs on inpatient psychiatric units.
R. P. Houghtalen and J. Doody,
23(2): 211-7, 1995
Stalking as a variant of domestic violence.
J. L. Kurt,
23(2): 219-30, 1995
Adapting symptom validity testing to evaluate suspicious complaints of amnesia
in medicolegal evaluations.
R. I. Frederick, M. Carter and J. Powel,
23(2): 231-7, 1995
Cult membership as a source of self-cohesion: forensic implications.
T. B. Feldmann and P. W. Johnson,
23(2): 239-48, 1995
Forensic psychiatry in Britain.
J. C. Beck,
23(2): 249-60, 1995
Biological parents regaining their rights: a psycholegal analysis of a new era
in custody disputes.
E. J. Kermani and B. A. Weiss,
23(2): 261-7, 1995
Denouement of an execution competency case: is Perry pyrrhic?
D. Mossman,
23(2): 269-84, 1995
Seroprevalence of human immunodeficiency virus among inpatient pretrial
detainees.
D. Schwartz-Watts, L. D. Montgomery and D. W. Morgan,
23(2): 285-8, 1995
Involuntary hospitalization and police referrals to a psychiatric emergency
department.
L. W. Reinish and J. R. Ciccone,
23(2): 289-98, 1995
Sex offenders who claim amnesia for their alleged offense.
D. Bourget and J. M. Bradford,
23(2): 299-307, 1995
California law enforcement agencies and the mentally ill offender.
J. R. Husted, R. A. Charter and B. Perrou,
23(3): 315-29, 1995
Lethal violence and psychosis: a clinical profile.
P. G. Nestor, J. Haycock, S. Doiron, J. Kelly and D. Kelly,
23(3): 331-41, 1995
Long-term, assenting psychiatric patients: decisional capacity and the quality
of care.
S. K. Hoge and T. C. Feucht-Haviar,
23(3): 343-52, 1995
Decision-making capacity for informed consent in the older population.
K. Christensen, A. Haroun, L. J. Schneiderman and D. V. Jeste,
23(3): 353-65, 1995
Running scared: therapists' excessive concerns about following rules.
W. Bernet,
23(3): 367-74, 1995
Neonaticide, infanticide, and filicide: a review of the literature.
S. E. Pitt and E. M. Bale,
23(3): 375-86, 1995
A clinical investigation of malingering and psychopathy in hospitalized insanity
acquittees.
C. B. Gacono, J. R. Meloy, K. Sheppard, E. Speth and A. Roske,
23(3): 387-97, 1995
Rates of insanity acquittals and the factors associated with successful insanity
pleas.
C. Cirincione, H. J. Steadman and M. A. McGreevy,
23(3): 399-409, 1995
Diagnostic patterns among three violent offender types.
R. M. Yarvis,
23(3): 411-9, 1995
Regulating pastoral counseling practice: the problem of sexual misconduct.
J. L. Young and E. E. Griffith,
23(3): 421-32, 1995
APA resource document: legal sanctions for mental health professional-patient
sexual misconduct.
S. K. Hoge, L. Jorgenson, N. Goldstein, J. Metzner, R. Patterson and G.
Robinson,
23(3): 433-48, 1995
Comparative forensic psychiatry: I. Commentary on the Italian system.
J. R. Ciccone and S. Ferracuti,
23(3): 449-52, 1995
Comparative forensic psychiatry: II. The perizia and the role of the forensic
psychiatrist in the Italian legal system.
J. R. Ciccone and S. Ferracuti,
23(3): 453-66, 1995
Countertransference in court interpreters.
L. A. Mellman,
23(3): 467-71, 1995
Proposed federal legislation jeopardizes patient privacy.
S. K. Hoge,
23(4): 495-500, 1995
Forensic and policy implications of the transracial adoption debate.
E. E. Griffith,
23(4): 501-12, 1995
Need for expansion of forensic psychiatrists' role in sexual harassment cases.
S. Feldman-Schorrig,
23(4): 513-22, 1995
A comparison of female versus male insanity acquittees in Colorado.
A. Seig, E. Ball and J. A. Menninger,
23(4): 523-32, 1995
Civil commitment viewed from three perspectives: professional, family, and
police.
J. R. Husted and A. Nehemkis,
23(4): 533-46, 1995
The mental state of arsonists as determined by forensic psychiatric
examinations.
P. Rasanen, H. Hakko and E. Vaisanen,
23(4): 547-53, 1995
Incurable psychopaths?
M. Kristiansson,
23(4): 555-62, 1995
Rape trauma syndrome in the military courts.
S. A. Young,
23(4): 563-71, 1995
Screening prison inmates for mental disorder: an examination of the relationship
between mental disorder and prison adjustment.
F. DiCataldo, A. Greer and W. E. Profit,
23(4): 573-85, 1995
Experiencing a shame response as a precursor to violence.
H. E. Thomas,
23(4): 587-93, 1995
Differential use of admission status in a psychiatric emergency room.
J. Rabinowitz, M. Slyuzberg, I. Salamon and S. E. Dupler,
23(4): 595-606, 1995
Violence and schizophrenia: clozapine as a specific antiaggressive agent.
P. Buckley, J. Bartell, K. Donenwirth, S. Lee, F. Torigoe and S. C. Schulz,
23(4): 607-11, 1995
Chronic fatigue syndrome associated with a psychotic state resulting in multiple
murders.
M. Ghahramani and V. Gooriah,
23(4): 613-6, 1995
Vol. 24, 1996
Myths, realities, and the political world: the anthropology of insanity defense
attitudes.
M. L. Perlin,
24(1): 5-26, 1996
Veterans affairs disability compensation: a case study in countertherapeutic
jurisprudence.
D. Mossman,
24(1): 27-44, 1996
Delayed traumatic recall in adults: a synthesis with legal, clinical, and
forensic recommendations.
J. O. Beahrs, J. J. Cannell and T. G. Gutheil,
24(1): 45-55, 1996
The role of serotonin in the future of forensic psychiatry.
J. M. Bradford,
24(1): 57-72, 1996
Medroxyprogesterone and paraphiles: do testosterone levels matter?
H. M. Kravitz, T. W. Haywood, J. Kelly, S. Liles and J. L. Cavanaugh, Jr.,
24(1): 73-83, 1996
Detection of misreported drug use in forensic populations: an overview of hair
analysis.
K. S. Kelly and R. Rogers,
24(1): 85-94, 1996
Genetics, antisocial personality, and criminal responsibility.
S. H. Dinwiddie,
24(1): 95-108, 1996
Pilot study of the adjunct utility of a computer-assisted Diagnostic Interview
Schedule (C-DIS) in forensic psychiatric patients.
J. Ahlberg, J. R. Tuck and C. Allgulander,
24(1): 109-16, 1996
Issues in forensic psychiatry in Islamic jurisprudence.
K. S. Chaleby,
24(1): 117-24, 1996
Forensic significance of the limbic psychotic trigger reaction.
A. A. Pontius,
24(1): 125-34, 1996
Understanding head injury and intellectual recovery from brain damage: is IQ an
adequate measure?
G. Cahn and R. E. Gould,
24(1): 135-42, 1996
Seroprevalence of human immunodeficiency virus among inpatient pretrial
detainees [letter].
K. McKinnon,
24(1): 143-4, 1996
Guttmacher lecture at the 1994 AAPL meetings [letter; comment].
J. Kroll,
24(1): 144-5, 1996
The quest for excellence in forensic psychiatry.
P. E. Dietz,
24(2): 153-63, 1996
Revisiting the insanity defense: contested or consensus?
C. Cirincione,
24(2): 165-76, 1996
Criminal recidivism in mentally ill offenders: a pilot study.
V. Harris and T. D. Koepsell,
24(2): 177-86, 1996
Mentally ill and non-mentally ill defendants' abilities to understand
information relevant to adjudication: a preliminary study.
S. K. Hoge, N. Poythress, R. Bonnie, M. Eisenberg, J. Monahan, T.
Feucht-Haviar and L. Oberlander,
24(2): 187-97, 1996
The propriety of broadly worded mental health inquiries on bar application
forms.
S. C. Gauffreau,
24(2): 199-217, 1996
Dangerousness and command hallucinations: an investigation of psychotic
inpatients.
M. E. Kasper, R. Rogers and P. A. Adams,
24(2): 219-24, 1996
Are pedophiles with aggressive tendencies more sexually violent?
D. M. Greenberg, J. M. Bradford and S. Curry,
24(2): 225-35, 1996
A descriptive study of emergency admissions to Farview State Hospital.
F. Fox, J. R. Ruby, K. Siska and T. Singer,
24(2): 237-45, 1996
Dangerousness commitments: indices of future violence potential?
R. A. Zeiss, E. D. Tanke, H. H. Fenn and J. A. Yesavage,
24(2): 247-53, 1996
Use of legal terms in will contests: implications for psychiatrists.
D. J. Sprehe and A. L. Kerr,
24(2): 255-65, 1996
Posttraumatic stress disorder, pulp fiction, and the press.
G. M. Rosen,
24(2): 267-9, 1996
Memory distortion and false memory creation.
E. F. Loftus,
24(3): 281-95, 1996
Establishing standards for criminal forensic reports: an empirical analysis.
R. Borum and T. Grisso,
24(3): 297-317, 1996
Incompetency to stand trial and mental health treatment: a case study testing
the subversion hypothesis.
E. Hochstedler Steury, M. Choinski and S. R. Steury,
24(3): 319-31, 1996
The relationship of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and conduct
disorder to juvenile delinquency: legal implications.
H. A. Foley, C. O. Carlton and R. J. Howell,
24(3): 333-45, 1996
California's diminished capacity defense: evolution and transformation.
R. Weinstock, G. B. Leong and J. A. Silva,
24(3): 347-66, 1996
Threats against clinicians: a preliminary descriptive classification.
G. P. Brown, W. R. Dubin, J. R. Lion and L. J. Garry,
24(3): 367-76, 1996
Forensic aspects of medical student abuse: a Canadian perspective.
K. J. Margittai, R. Moscarello and M. F. Rossi,
24(3): 377-85, 1996
Factitious sexual harassment.
S. Feldman-Schorrig,
24(3): 387-92, 1996
APA resource document: I. The professional responsibilities of psychiatrists in
evolving health care systems.
S. K. Hoge,
24(3): 393-406, 1996
APA resource document: II. Regulatory guidelines for protecting the interests of
psychiatric patients in emerging health care systems.
S. K. Hoge,
24(3): 407-18, 1996
Role of serotonin in forensic psychiatry [letter].
P. Buckley, G. Gardner, S. Lee and F. Torigoe,
24(3): 419-22, 1996
Data collected to test hypotheses about psychological trauma [letter].
J. Goodwin,
24(3): 422-3, 1996
Myths, realities, and the political world: the anthropology of insanity defense
attitudes [letter].
A. L. Halpern,
24(3): 423-6, 1996
Myths, realities, and the political world: the anthropology of insanity defense
attitudes [letter].
B. S. Joseph,
24(3): 426-7, 1996
Capacity to consent to voluntary hospitalization: searching for a satisfactory
Zinermon screen.
N. G. Poythress, M. Cascardi and L. Ritterband,
24(4): 439-52, 1996
Prearraignment forensic evaluations: toward a new policy.
S. A. Ornish, M. J. Mills and M. C. Ornish,
24(4): 453-70, 1996
When Munchausen becomes malingering: factitious disorders that penetrate the
legal system.
S. J. Eisendrath,
24(4): 471-81, 1996
Tales of the crypt for psychiatrists: mourning, melancholia, and mortuary
malpractice.
S. Eth, G. B. Leong and T. R. Garrick,
24(4): 483-92, 1996
Postconcussional disorder and loss of consciousness.
S. D. Anderson,
24(4): 493-504, 1996
A clinical study of competency in psychiatric inpatients.
S. B. Billick, P. W. Naylor, M. F. Majeske, W. Burgert, 3rd and G. P.
Davis,
24(4): 505-11, 1996
Patients' attitudes toward having been forcibly medicated.
W. M. Greenberg, L. Moore-Duncan and R. Herron,
24(4): 513-24, 1996
A comparison of treatment of paraphilias with three serotonin reuptake
inhibitors: a retrospective study.
D. M. Greenberg, J. M. Bradford, S. Curry and O. R. A,
24(4): 525-32, 1996
Trading forensic and family commitments.
A. J. Kearney, T. G. Gutheil and M. L. Commons,
24(4): 533-46, 1996
Posttraumatic stress disorder, pulp fiction, and the press [letter].
F. Nesbit,
24(4): 547, 1996
Vol. 25, 1997
Interpreting the effectiveness of involuntary outpatient commitment: a
conceptual model.
J. W. Swanson, M. S. Swartz, L. K. George, B. J. Burns, V. A. Hiday, R.
Borum and H. R. Wagner,
25(1): 5-16, 1997
Toward the development of guidelines for the conduct of forensic psychiatric
examinations.
R. I. Simon and R. M. Wettstein,
25(1): 17-30, 1997
Memory, repression, and child sexual abuse: forensic implications for the mental
health professional.
T. B. Corelli, M. J. Hoag and R. J. Howell,
25(1): 31-47, 1997
Survivors of sexual abuse allege therapist negligence.
C. Regehr and G. Glancy,
25(1): 49-58, 1997
Scientific status of the concept of continuing emotional propensity for sexually
aberrant acts.
R. I. Lanyon,
25(1): 59-67, 1997
Self-mutilation and suicide attempt: distinguishing features in prisoners.
C. Fulwiler, C. Forbes, S. L. Santangelo and M. Folstein,
25(1): 69-77, 1997
Beyond the black letter of the law: an empirical study of an individual judge's
decision process for civil commitment hearings.
H. J. Bursztajn, R. M. Hamm and T. G. Gutheil,
25(1): 79-94, 1997
Group dynamics in forensic pretrial decision-making.
S. E. Pitt, J. D. Brandt, C. Tellefsen, J. S. Janofsky, M. E. Cohen, E. D.
Bettis and J. R. Rappeport,
25(1): 95-104, 1997
Depression in jailed women defendants and its relationship to their adjudicative
competence.
R. E. Redding,
25(1): 105-19, 1997
American Psychiatric Association resources document on principles of informed
consent in psychiatry.
Anonymous,
25(1): 121-5, 1997
Book Reviews.
25(1): 127-130, 1997
Almost a revolution: an international perspective on the law of involuntary
commitment.
P. S. Appelbaum,
25(2): 135-47, 1997
Description of an outpatient psychiatric population in a youthful offender's
prison.
J. P. Kemph, R. O. Braley and P. V. Ciotola,
25(2): 149-60, 1997
Not guilty by reason of insanity of murder: clinical and neuropsychological
characteristics.
P. G. Nestor and J. Haycock,
25(2): 161-71, 1997
Aggression and schizophrenia: efficacy of risperidone.
P. F. Buckley, Z. Y. Ibrahim, B. Singer, B. Orr, K. Donenwirth and P. S.
Brar,
25(2): 173-81, 1997
Detection of malingering: validation of the Structured Inventory of Malingered
Symptomatology (SIMS).
G. P. Smith and G. K. Burger,
25(2): 183-9, 1997
Competency to consent to hospitalization in the medical patient.
S. B. Billick, P. Della Bella and W. Burgert, 3rd,
25(2): 191-6, 1997
Accommodations for test anxiety under ADA?
G. E. Zuriff,
25(2): 197-206, 1997
Criminal recidivism and family histories of schizophrenic and nonschizophrenic
fire setters: comorbid alcohol dependence in schizophrenic fire setters.
E. Repo and M. Virkkunen,
25(2): 207-15, 1997
Ethical aspects of competence for sexual relationships: a case of adult sibling
incest.
M. J. Feldman and T. G. Gutheil,
25(2): 217-22, 1997
Book Reviews.
25(2): 223-225, 1997
A theory of ethics for forensic psychiatry.
P. S. Appelbaum,
25(3): 233-47, 1997
The MacArthur Adjudicative Competence Study: a comparison of criteria for
assessing the competence of criminal defendants.
R. J. Bonnie, S. K. Hoge, J. Monahan, N. Poythress, M. Eisenberg and T.
Feucht-Haviar,
25(3): 249-59, 1997
Predictors of adolescent psychopathy: oppositional and conduct-disordered
symptoms.
R. Rogers, J. Johansen, J. J. Chang and R. T. Salekin,
25(3): 261-71, 1997
The origins of forensic psychiatry in the United States and the great
nineteenth-century crisis over the adjudication of wills.
J. C. Mohr,
25(3): 273-84, 1997
Does "isolation" cause jail suicides?
A. R. Felthous,
25(3): 285-94, 1997
Impact of social changes on female mentally disordered offenders from 1980 to
1994 in Japan.
L. Xie,
25(3): 295-310, 1997
Identifying homeless mentally ill veterans in jail: a preliminary report.
J. G. Stovall, L. Cloninger and L. Appleby,
25(3): 311-5, 1997
A comparative study of psychotic and nonpsychotic stalking.
K. K. Kienlen, D. L. Birmingham, K. B. Solberg, J. T. O'Regan and J. R.
Meloy,
25(3): 317-34, 1997
Natural born killers?: the development of the sexually sadistic serial killer.
B. R. Johnson and J. V. Becker,
25(3): 335-48, 1997
Treatment refusal procedures and service utilization: a comparison of
involuntarily hospitalized populations.
J. D. Bloom, M. H. Williams, C. Land, M. C. Hornbrook and J. Mahler,
25(3): 349-57, 1997
American Psychiatric Association resource document on peer review of expert
testimony.
Anonymous,
25(3): 359-73, 1997
An introduction to correctional psychiatry: Part I.
J. L. Metzner,
25(3): 375-81, 1997
Jaffee v. Redmond: making the courts a tool of injustice?
K. W. Chan,
25(3): 383-9, 1997
Assessing the criminal responsibility of individuals with multiple personality
disorder: legal cases, legal theory.
S. H. Behnke,
25(3): 391-9, 1997
Anatomy of a prison commission.
P. J. Candilis and K. L. Appelbaum,
25(3): 401-7, 1997
Prearraignment forensic evaluations: toward a new policy [letter; comment].
A. L. Halpern,
25(3): 421-3; discussion 426-32, 1997
Prearraignment forensic evaluations: toward a new policy [letter; comment].
J. C. Schoenholtz,
25(3): 423-6; discussion 426-32, 1997
Book Reviews.
25(3): 433-435, 1997
Sex on the wards: Conundra for clinicians.
D. Mossman, M. L. Perlin and D. A. Dorfman,
25(4): 441-60, 1997
Risperidone in the management of violent, treatment-resistant schizophrenics
hospitalized in a maximum security forensic facility.
N. C. Beck, S. R. Greenfield, H. Gotham, A. A. Menditto, P. Stuve and C. A.
Hemme,
25(4): 461-8, 1997
Competency to stand trial evaluations: a study of actual practice in two states.
E. Robbins, J. Waters and P. Herbert,
25(4): 469-83, 1997
Genocide in Bosnia: the case of Dr. Radovan Karadzic.
K. B. Dekleva and J. M. Post,
25(4): 485-96, 1997
Psychopathology and personality in juvenile sexual homicide offenders.
W. C. Myers and R. Blashfield,
25(4): 497-508, 1997
The impact of system design on the characteristics of Missouri's insanity
acquittees.
D. M. Linhorst,
25(4): 509-29, 1997
Cognitive functions in the informed consent evaluation process: a pilot study.
J. C. Holzer, D. A. Gansler, N. P. Moczynski and M. F. Folstein,
25(4): 531-40, 1997
Stalkers: the South Carolina experience.
D. Schwartz-Watts, D. W. Morgan and C. J. Barnes,
25(4): 541-5, 1997
Above the law: escapes from a maximum security forensic hospital and
psychopathy.
C. B. Gacono, J. R. Meloy, E. Speth and A. Roske,
25(4): 547-50, 1997
American Psychiatric Association resource document on preserving patient
confidentiality in the era of information technology.
Anonymous,
25(4): 551-9, 1997
American Psychiatric Association resource document on computerized records: a
guide to security.
Anonymous,
25(4): 561-4, 1997
Do juries listen to jury instructions?
S. H. Berger,
25(4): 565-70, 1997
An introduction to correctional psychiatry: Part II.
J. L. Metzner,
25(4): 571-9, 1997
A suggested framework for forensic consultation in cases of child abuse and
neglect.
R. Barnum,
25(4): 581-93, 1997
Physician-assisted suicide and the Supreme Court: the Washington and Vacco
verdicts.
P. J. Candilis and K. L. Appelbaum,
25(4): 595-606, 1997
Kansas v. Hendricks.
A. J. Grudzinskas, Jr. and M. G. Henry,
25(4): 607-12, 1997
Book Reviews.
25(4): 625-628, 1997
Vol. 26, 1998
Disabled Doctors: The Insurance Industry Seeks a Second Opinion.
B. W. Wall and K. L. Appelbaum,
26(1): 7-19, 1998
Expert Witness Travel Dilemmas: A Pilot Study of Billing Practices.
T. G. Gutheil, F. E. Slater, M. L.Commons and E. A. Goodheart,
26(1): 21-26, 1998
"Courtroom Whores"? -- or Why Do Attorneys Call Us?: Findings from a Survey on
Attorneys' Use of Mental Health Experts.
D. Mossman and M. B. Kapp,
26(1): 27-36, 1998
Prototypes of Intrafamily Homicide and Serious Assault Among Insanity
Acquittees.
M. E. Lewis, D. C. Scott, M. V. Baranoski, J. A. Buchanan and E. E. H.
Griffith,
26(1): 37-48, 1998
Relating Competency Status to Functional Status at Discharge in Patients with
Chronic Mental Illness.
B. N. Jones, G. Jayaram, J. Samuels and H. Robinson,
26(1): 49-55, 1998
Corruption in Law Enforcement: A Paradigm of Occupational Stress and Deviancy.
F. L. McCafferty and M. A. McCafferty,
26(1): 57-65, 1998
A Comparison of Youthful Inmates Who Have Committed Violent Versus Nonviolent
Crimes.
J. P. Kemph, R. O. Braley and P. V. Ciotola,
26(1): 67-74, 1998
Extended Civil Commitment for Dangerous Psychiatric Patients.
L. E. Weinberger, S. Sreenivasan and EtanMarkowitz,
26(1): 75-87, 1998
Competency to Stand Trial in Preadjudicatory Juveniles and Adults.
G. R. McKee,
26(1): 89-99, 1998
Stone Walls Do Not a Prison Psychiatrist Make.
A. Robey,
26(1): 101-105, 1998
An Introduction to Correctional Psychiatry: Part III.
J. L. Metzner,
26(1): 107-115, 1998
Disability Discrimination and Parker v. Metropolitan Life: Separate, but
Equal?
B. W. Wall,
26(1): 117-121, 1998
Privatized Managed Care and Forensic Mental Health Services.
I. K. Packer,
26(1): 123-129, 1998
Legal Digest.
K. L. Appelbaum and J. Albert J. Grudzinskas,
26 (1 ): 131-149 , 1998
Book Reviews.
26 (1 ): 159-164 , 1998
Ethics In Forensic Psychiatry: A Cultural Response To Stone and Appelbaum.
E. E. H. Griffith,
26(2): 171-184, 1998
Recidivism in Convicted Rapists.
P. Firestone, J. M. Bradford, M. McCoy, D. M. Greenberg, S. Curry and M. R.
Larose,
26(2): 185-200, 1998
Quantifying Psychological Victimization: Scientific Uncertainty, Legal
Necessity.
J. O. Beahrs,
26(2): 201-214, 1998
The Competence-Related Abilities of Women Criminal Defendants.
N. G. Poythress, S. K. Hoge, R. J.Bonnie, J. Monahan, M. Eisenberg and
TomFeucht-Haviar,
26(2): 215-222, 1998
Competency to Stand Trial Adjudication: A Comparison of Female and Male
Defendants.
S. E. Riley,
26(2): 223-240, 1998
Violent Versus Nonviolent Stalkers.
D. Schwartz-Watts and D. W. Morgan,
26(2): 241-245, 1998
Pediatric Traumatic Brain Injury and Burn Patients in the Civil Justice System:
The Prevalence and Impact of Psychiatric Symptomatology.
J. E. Max, W. A. Bowers, D. Baldus and E. E. Gaylor,
26(2): 247-258, 1998
Evaluating Privilege Requests from Mentally Ill Prisoners.
E. R. Pinta,
26(2): 259-265, 1998 P> American Psychiatric
Association Resource Document on Controversies in Child Custody: Gay and Lesbian
Parenting, Transracial Adoptions, Joint Versus Sole Custody, and Custody Gender
Issues.
R. L. Binder,
26(2): 267-276, 1998
Report from the Committee on Sex Offenders: The Abel Assessment for Sexual
Interest-- A Brief Description.
R. B. Krueger, J. M. W. Bradford and G. D. Glancy,
26(2): 277-280, 1998
Psychiatry, the Law, and Public Affairs.
N. L. Stotland,
26(2): 281-287, 1998
Reconsideration of Sexual Misconduct by Clergy Counselors: The Case of F.G.
v. MacDonell.
J. L. Young and E. E. H. Griffith,
26(2): 289-293, 1998
Forensic Psychiatry in the United States Military.
R. G. Lande and D. M. Benedek,
26(2): 295-304, 1998
The Practice of Forensic Psychiatry: Perils, Problems, and Pitfalls.
R. L. Sadoff,
26(2): 305-314, 1998
Book Reviews.
26(2): 333-336, 1998
Donaldson Revisited: Is Dangerousness a Constitutional Requirement for
Civil Commitment?
G. E. Linburn,
26(3): 343-351, 1998
Command Hallucinations, Compliance, and Risk Assessment.
K. Hersh and R. Borum,
26(3): 353-359, 1998
The Credible Forensic Psychiatric Evaluation in Multiple Chemical Sensitivity
Litigation.
R. I. Simon,
26(3): 361-374, 1998
Differences in Anxiety Between First-Time and Multiple-Time Inmates: A
Multicultural Perspective .
V. Reinhardt and R. Rogers,
26(3): 375-382, 1998
Mourning in Prison: Mission Impossible?.
D. H. Schetky,
26(3): 383-391, 1998
Rearrest Among Mentally Ill Offenders.
V. Harris and T. D. Koepsell,
26(3): 393-402, 1998
Capital Versus Noncapital Murderers.
R. L. Frierson, D. M. Schwartz-Watts, D. W. Morgan and T. D. Malone,
26(3): 403-410, 1998
An Examination of Gender and Racial Differences Among Missouri Insanity
Acquittees.
D. M. Linhorst, L. Hunsucker and L. D. Parker,
26(3): 411-424, 1998
The Burgess Decision and the Wallerstein Brief.
R. A. Gardner,
26(3): 425-431, 1998
The Corruption Process of a Law Enforcement Officer: A Paradigm of Occupational
Stress and Deviancy.
F. L. McCafferty, S. Souryal and M. A. McCafferty,
26(3): 433-458, 1998
Personal Computers in Forensic Psychiatry.
P. Ash,
26(3): 459-466, 1998
Managed Behavioral Healthcare in Correctional Settings.
R. F. Patterson,
26(3): 467-473, 1998
Sickness and Wickedness: New Conceptions and New Paradoxes.
J. Feinberg,
26(3): 475-485, 1998
Murder, Minors, Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors, and the Involuntary
Intoxication Defense .
W. C. Myers and M. A. Vondruska,
26(3): 487-496, 1998
General Electric Co. v. Joiner: Lighting Up the Post-Daubert Landscape?.
J. Albert J. Grudzinskas and K. L. Appelbaum,
26(3): 497-503, 1998
Book Reviews.
26(3): 521-530, 1998
Homicidal Sex Offenders: Psychological, Phallometric,and Diagnostic Features.
P. Firestone, J. M. Bradford, D. M. Greenberg and M. R. Larose,
26(4): 537-552, 1998
Legal Liability and Workplace Violence.
S. J. Brakel,
26(4): 553-562, 1998
Addressing Bias in the Forensic Assessment of Sexual Harassment Claims.
L. H. Gold,
26(4): 563-578, 1998
Clinical Symptom Presentation in Suspected Malingerers: An Empirical
Investigation.
L. T. Kucharski, W. Ryan, J. Vogt and E. Goodloe,
26(4): 579-585, 1998
A Clinical Study of Competency in Child Psychiatric Inpatients.
S. B. Billick, J. L. Edwards, W. B. III, J. R. Serlen and S. M. Bruni,
26(4): 587-594, 1998
A Model For Predicting Depression in Victims of Rape.
C. Regehr, G. Regehr and J. Bradford,
26(4): 595-605, 1998
The Dangerousness of Persons with Delusional Jealousy.
J. A. Silva, M. M. Ferrari, G. B. Leong and G. Penny,
26(4): 607-623, 1998
Police Attitudes Toward Mental Illness and Psychiatric Patients in Israel.
R. Kimhi, Y. Barak, J. Gutman, Y. Melamed, M. Zohar and I. Barak,
26(4): 625-630, 1998
Coercion in Psychiatric Care: What Have We Learned from Research?.
C. W. Lidz,
26(4): 631-637, 1998
Testimonial Privilege and the Problem of Death: The Vincent Foster Case and
Beyond.
S. H. Behnke,
26(4): 639-648, 1998
Dangerousness: A Mutating Concept Passes Through the Literature.
M. G. Goldzband,
26(4): 649-654, 1998
The Ethics of the Texas Death Penalty and Its Impact on a Prolonged Appeals
Process.
T. Pearlman,
26(4): 655-660, 1998
The Development of Internal Forensic Review Boards in the Management of
Hospitalized Insanity Acquittees.
R. F. Patterson and B. F. Wise,
26(4): 661-664, 1998
Pennsylvania Department of Corrections et al. v. Ronald R. Yeskey:
Prisons and the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.
J. L. Metzner,
26(4): 665-668, 1998
Book Reviews.
26(4): 687-689, 1998
Vol. 27, 1999
Novel Antipsychotic Agents and Their Implications for Forensic Psychiatry.
D. A. Pinals and P. F. Buckley,
27(1): 7-22, 1999
Sadism and Psychopathy in Violent and Sexually Violent Offenders.
S. E. Holt, J. R. Meloy and S. Strack,
27(1): 23-33, 1999
Effects of Practitioners' Sexual Misconduct: A Follow-Up Study.
E. T. Luepker,
27(1): 51-64, 1999
Competency to Stand Trial in Family Court: Characteristics of Competent and
Incompetent Juveniles .
G. R. McKee and S. J. Shea,
27(1): 65-74, 1999
Conducting Forensic Examinations on the Road: Are You Practicing Your Profession
Without a License?.
R. I. Simon and D. W. Shuman,
27(1): 75-82, 1999
Flunitrazepam (Rohypnol) Abuse in Combination with Alcohol Causes Premeditated,
Grievous Violence in Male Juvenile Offenders.
A. M. Daderman and L. Lidberg,
27(1): 83-101, 1999
Neuropsychological Assessment of Competency to Stand Trial Evaluations: A
Practical Conceptual Model.
P. Kirkish and S. Sreenivasan,
27(1): 101-115, 1999
O'Connor v. Donaldson: Retelling a Classic and Finding Some Revisionist
History.
S. H. Behnke,
27(1): 115-126, 1999
Testifying with Confidence.
R. Slovenko,
27(1): 127-132, 1999
Polygraphy Revisited: U.S. v. Scheffer.
M. G. Goldzband,
27(1): 133-142, 1999
Developments in Clergy Malpractice: The Case of Sanders v. Casa View Baptist
Church
.
J. L. Young and E. E. H. Griffith,
27(1): 143-148, 1999
Constitutional Rights and Hypnotically Elicited Testimony.
A. W. Newman and J. John W. Thompson,
27(1): 149-154, 1999
Book Review.
27(1): 181-183, 1999
Are the Mentally Ill Dangerous?
R. L. Binder,
27(2): 189-201, 1999
The Litigant-Patient: Mental Health Consequences of Civil Litigation.
L. H. Strasburger,
27(2): 203-211, 1999
Offender and Offense Characteristics of a Nonrandom Sample of Mass Murderers.
A. G. Hempel, J. R. Meloy and T. C. Richards,
27(2): 213-225, 1999
Sexual Burglaries and Sexual Homicide: Clinical, Forensic, and Investigative
Considerations.
L. B. Schlesinger and E. Revitch,
27(2): 227-238, 1999
Explaining Lifetime Criminal Arrests among Clients of a Psychiatric Probation
and Parole Service.
P. Solomon and J. Draine,
27(2): 239-251, 1999
Relation Between Command Hallucinations and Dangerous Behavior.
A. Rudnick,
27(2): 253-257, 1999
A Typology of Patients Admitted to a Forensic Psychiatric Hospital from
Correctional Settings .
F. DiCataldo,
27(2): 259-272, 1999
Thirty Years and Still Growing.
J. R. Rappeport,
27(2): 273-277, 1999
Old Duties and New: Recovered Memories and the Question of Third-Party
Liability.
S. H. Behnke,
27(2): 279-300, 1999
Canadian Landmark Case: Regina v. Swain: Translating M'Naughton into
Twentieth Century Canadian.
G. D. Glancy and J. McD.Bradford,
27(2): 301-307, 1999
Emerich v. Philadelphia Center for Human Development: The New Duty to
Warn in Pennsylvania.
R. M. Wettstein,
27(2): 309-313, 1999
Tardive Dyskinesia: Tremors in Law and Medicine.
N. S. Kaye and T. J. Reed,
27(2): 315-333, 1999
Posttraumatic Polarization in Psychiatry and Law.
J. O. Beahrs,
27(2): 335-343, 1999
Videotaping of Forensic Psychiatric Evaluations.
AAPL Task Force,
27(2): 345-343, 1999
From Thoughts to Paper.
J. T. Coleman,
27(3): 376, 1999
The Effects of a Jail Diversion Program on Incarceration: A Retrospective Cohort
Study.
R. A. Hoff, M. V. Baranosky, J. Buchanan, H. Zonana and R. A. Rosenheck,
27(3): 377-386, 1999
Utility of the Structured Inventory of Malingered Symptomatology in Identifying
Persons Motivated to Malinger Psychopathology.
J. F. Edens, R. K. Otto and T. Dwyer,
27(3): 387-396, 1999
Risk Communication: Clinicians' Reported Approaches and Perceived Values.
K. Heilbrun, J. Philipson, L. Berman and J. Warren,
27(3): 397-406, 1999
Stalking in Cyberspace.
J. M. Deirmenjian,
27(3): 407-413, 1999
"Hired Guns," "Whores," and "Prostitutes": Case Law References to Clinicians of
Ill Repute.
D. Mossman,
27(3): 414-425, 1999
Medication Adherence Failure in Schizophrenia: A Forensic Review of Rates,
Reasons, Treatments, and Prospects.
J. L. Young, R. T. Spitz, M. Hillbrand and G. Daneri,
27(3): 426-444, 1999
The Suicide Prevention Contract: Clinical, Legal, and Risk Management Issues.
R. I. Simon,
27(3): 445-450, 1999
The Forensic Psychiatrist as Expert Witness in Malpractice Cases.
A. A. Stone,
27(3): 451-461, 1999
Memory as Power: Who Is To Decide?.
J. O. Beahrs,
27(3): 462-470, 1999
Waiving Death Row Appeals: Whose Right Is It Anyway?.
K. J. Weiss,
27(3): 471-481, 1999
Kumho Tire Co., Ltd. v. Carmichael.
J. Albert J. Grudzinskas,
27(3): 482-488, 1999
Book Reviews.
27(3): 500-503, 1999
Larry Faulkner: Twenty-fifth President of the American Academy of Psychiatry and
the Law.
D. Schwartz-Watts,
27(4): 511-512, 1999
Substance Abuse and Criminality.
R. Sinha and C. Easton,
27(4): 513-526, 1999
The Physician-Assisted Suicide Policy Dilemma: A Pilot Study of the Views and
Experiences of Connecticut Physicians.
H. I. Schwartz, L. Curry, K. Blank and C. Gruman,
27(4): 527-539, 1999
Commentary on "The Physician-Assisted Suicide Policy Dilemma".
S. Fleck,
27(4): 540-541, 1999
Commentary on "The Physician-Assisted Suicide Policy Dilemma".
J. D. Duffy,
27(4): 542-545, 1999
Attorneys' Pressures on the Expert Witness: Early Warning Signs of Endangered
Honesty, Objectivity, and Fair Compensation.
T. G. Gutheil and R. I. Simon,
27(4): 546-553, 1999
Commentary on "Attorneys' Pressures on the Expert Witness".
R. L. Goldstein,
27(4): 554-558, 1999
Commentary on "Attorneys' Pressures on the Expert Witness".
M. Dearington,
27(4): 559-562, 1999
The Unconditional Release of Mentally Ill Offenders from Indefinite Commitment:
A Study of Missouri Insanity Acquittees.
D. M. Linhorst,
27(4): 563-579, 1999
Psychiatric Testimony and the "Reasonable Person" Standard.
K. J. Weiss,
27(4): 580-589, 1999
Assaultive Eye Injury and Enucleation.
A. O. Bukhanovsky, Anthony Hempel, W. Ahmed, J. R. Meloy, A. C. Brantley, D.
Cuneo, R. Gleyzer and A. R. Felthous,
27(4): 590-602, 1999
The Americans with Disabilities Act and Deinstitutionalization of the
Chronically Mentally Ill.
P. B. Herbert and K. A. Young,
27(4): 603-613, 1999
Canadian Landmark Case, Smith v. Jones, Supreme Court of Canada:
Confidentiality and Privilege Suffer Another Blow.
R. J. O'Shaughnessy, G. D. Glancy and J. M. Bradford,
27(4): 614-620, 1999
U.S. v. Greer: Longer Sentences for Malingerers.
J. L. K. IV and P. J. Resnick,
27(4): 621-625, 1999
Some Reflections on Racial Profiling.
F. M. Baker,
27(4): 626-629, 1999
"The Color of Suspicion": Race Profiling or Racism?.
V. Garyali,
27(4): 630-632, 1999
Psychoanalytic Perspectives on Racial Profiling.
H. F. Butts,
27(4): 633-635, 1999
Vol. 28, 2000
Grandparent Visitation Rights.
J. E. Schowalter,
28(1): 7-8, 2000
Thomas G. Gutheil: A President for the New Millennium.
R. I. Simon,
28(1): 9-13, 2000
Ensuring That Forensic Psychiatry Thrives as a Medical Specialty in the 21st
Century.
L. R. Faulkner,
28(1): 14-20, 2000
Commentary on "Ensuring That Forensic Psychiatry Thrives as a Medical Specialty
in the 21st Century".
J. M. W. Bradford and G. Glancy,
28(1): 20-22, 2000
The Mental State at the Time of the Offense Measure: Its Validation and
Admissibility under Daubert.
R. Rogers and D. W. Shuman,
28(1): 23-28, 2000
Commentary on "The Mental State at the Time of the Offense Measure".
N. Poythress, G. B. Melton, J. Petrila and C. Slobogin,
28(1): 29-32, 2000
Commentary on "The Mental State at the Time of the Offense Measure": Should We
Ever Screen for Insanity?
W. E. Foote,
28(1): 33-37, 2000
The Future of Criminal Violence: Juveniles Tried as Adults.
P. Kirkish, S. Sreenivasan, Robert Welsh, W. V. Gorp, S. Eth, S. Shoptaw
and W. Ling,
28(1): 38-46, 2000
The Guilty but Mentally Ill Verdict: A Review and Conceptual Analysis of Intent
and Impact.
C. A. Palmer and M. Hazelrigg,
28(1): 47-54, 2000
Mass Homicide: The Civil Massacre.
C. H. Cantor, P. E. Mullen and P. A. Alpers,
28(1): 55-63, 2000
Suicide, Contributory Negligence, and the Idea of Individual Autonomy.
S. H. Behnke,
28(1): 64-73, 2000
Suspected Munchausen's Syndrome and Civil Commitment.
B. R. Johnson and J. A. Harrison,
28(1): 74-76, 2000
Diminished Capacity and Insanity in Washington State: The Battle Shifts to
Admissibility.
G. B. Leong,
28(1): 77-81, 2000
Hubbart v. Superior Court of Santa Clara County.
C. L. Scott and R. M. Yarvis,
28(1): 82-85, 2000
Institutional Failure in the Life Histories of Men Condemned to Death.
D. Freedman and J. C. Beck,
28(1): 86-88, 2000
The Prosecution of Nathaniel Abraham-- A Minor.
R. Slovenko,
28(1): 89-101, 2000
Education, Special Needs, and Medical Exclusions: A Good "IDEA"?
K. J. Weiss,
28(1): 102-106, 2000
Resource Document on Mandatory Outpatient Treatment.
J. B. Gerbasi and R. L. B. Richard J. Bonnie,
28(2): 127-144, 2000
Mandated Outpatient Treatment: A Quick Fix for Random Violence?-- Not Likely.
H. Zonana,
28(2): 124-126, 2000
Commentary: Capacity-Based Involuntary Outpatient Treatment.
M. R. Munetz, J. L. Geller and F. J. F. III,
28(2): 145-148, 2000
Commentary: A Major Advance in the Laws Pertaining to Community Treatment for
Persons with Severe Mental Illness.
H. R. Lamb and L. E. Weinberger,
28(2): 149-153, 2000
Commentary: The Law of Unintended Consequences.
E. Mattison,
28(2): 154-158, 2000
Commentary: A "Systems"-Based Alternative to Mandatory Outpatient Treatment.
L. I. Stein and R. J. Diamond,
28(2): 159-164, 2000
The Case Against Outpatient Commitment.
M. A. Hoge and E. Grottole,
28(2): 165-170, 2000
Terrorist on Trial: The Context of Political Crime.
J. M. Post,
28(2): 171-178, 2000
Spousal Homicide and Suicide in Quebec.
D. Bourget, P. Gagne and J. Moamai,
28(2): 179-182, 2000
Predictions of Violent and "Total Infractions Among" Institutionalized Male
"Juvenile Offenders".
M. M. Hicks, R. Rogers and M. Cashel,
28(2): 183-191, 2000
Promoting Research in "Forensic Psychiatry".
L. R. Faulkner,
28(2): 198-201, 2000
Transitioning Individuals with Mental Retardation and Developmental Disability:
The Other Sister.
J. H. Hammer, J. Holloway, D. K. DePrato and K. J. Weiss,
28(2): 202-205, 2000
Canadian Landmark Case, Winko v. British Columbia: Revisiting the
Conundrum of the Mentally Disordered Accused.
R. D. Schneider, G. D. Glancy, J. M. Bradford and E. Seibenmorgen,
28(2): 206-212, 2000
The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act: Law Enforcement's Secret Weapon.
L. Danoff,
28(2): 213-224, 2000
Insanity Acquittees and Rearrest: The Past 24 Years.
V. L. Harris,
28(2): 225-231, 2000
Behind Bars: Personality Disorders.
R. L. Trestman,
28(2): 232-235, 2000
Mental Illness, Criminality, and Citizenship.
M. Rowe and M. Baranoski,
28(3): 262-264, 2000
From Dangerousness to Risk Assessment of Community Violence: Taking Stock at the
Turn of the Century.
H. J. Steadman,
28(3): 265-271, 2000
Commentary: Assessing the Risk of Violence-- Are "Accurate" Predictions Useful?
D. Mossman,
28(3): 272-281, 2000
Commentary: Dangerousness-- A Failed Paradigm for Clinical Practice and Service
Delivery.
M. A. Norko,
28(3): 282-289, 2000
Forensic Psychiatrists' Fee Agreements: A Preliminary Empirical Survey and
Discussion.
T. G. Gutheil,
28(3): 290-292, 2000
Interpreting Clinical Evidence of Malingering: A Bayesian Perspective.
D. Mossman,
28(3): 293-302, 2000
The Relationship of Deviant Sexual Arousal and Psychopathy in Incest Offenders,
Extrafamilial Child Molesters, and Rapists.
P. Firestone, J. M. Bradford, D. M. Greenberg and G. A. Serran,
28(3): 303-308, 2000
The Effect of Psychopathy on Outcome in High Security Patients.
D. Reiss, C. Meux and D. Grubin,
28(3): 309-314, 2000
Criminal Profiling: Is There a Role for the Forensic Psychiatrist?
M. G. McGrath,
28(3): 315-324, 2000
Police Encounters with Persons with Mental Illness: Introduction.
K. L. Appelbaum,
28(3): 325-325, 2000
A Community Policing Approach to Persons with Mental Illness.
G. W. Cordner,
28(3): 326-331, 2000
Improving High Risk Encounters Between People with Mental Illness and the
Police.
R. Borum,
28(3): 332-337, 2000
Police Response to Mental Health Emergencies-- Barriers to Change.
R. Dupont and S. Cochran,
28(3): 338-344, 2000
Policing the Emotionally Disturbed.
J. J. Fyfe,
28(3): 345-347, 2000
Davis v. Monroe County Board of Education et al.
C. L. Scott and M. Nabong,
28(3): 348-351, 2000
America's Daughters on Gandhi's Daughters.
J. A. Roth, M. K. Pruett and MSL,
28(3): 352-356, 2000
Rape, Justice, and Hierarchy in India.
P. Desai and R. Desai,
28(3): 357-359, 2000
Sex Offender Testimony: Junk Science or Unethical Testimony?
H. Zonana,
28(4): 386-388, 2000
Illegal Behaviors in Problem Gambling: Analysis of Data from a Gambling
Helpline.
M. N. Potenza, M. A. Steinberg, S. D. McLaughlin, R. Wu, B. J. Rounsaville
and S. S. O'Malley,
28(4): 389-403, 2000
Commentary: Types, Lotteries, and Substance Abuse Among Problem Gamblers.
H. R. Lesieur,
28(4): 404-407, 2000
All God's Children: Religion, Divorce, and Child Custody.
M. G. Goldzband,
28(4): 408-424, 2000
Survey of Forensic Psychiatrists on Evaluation and Treatment of Prisoners on
Death Row.
G. B. Leong, J. A. Silva, R. Weinstock and L. Ganzini,
28(4): 427-432, 2000
Licensure Requirements for Out-of-State Forensic Examinations.
W. H. Reid and MPH,
28(4): 433-437, 2000
Actuarial Risk Assessment Models: A Review of Critical Issues Related to
Violence and Sex-Offender Recidivism Assessments.
S. Sreenivasan, P. Kirkish, M. Thomas Garrick, Linda E. Weinberger and A.
Phenix,
28(4): 438-448, 2000
Criminal Responsibility, Diminished Capacity, and the Gay Panic Defense.
B. W. Wall,
28(4): 454-459, 2000
Canadian Landmark Case: L.C. and the Attorney General for Alberta v. Brian
Joseph Mills.
C. Regehr, G. D. Glancy and J. Bradford,
28(4): 460-464, 2000
Troxel, et vir, Petitioners v. Granville: Grandparents' Rights or
Parental Autonomy?.
C. L. Scott,
28(4): 465-468, 2000
Dangerous Severe Personality Disorder: Extension of the Use of Civil Commitment
in the United Kingdom.
D. M. Walcott and J. C. Beck,
28(4): 469-475, 2000
Mental Health Court: Promises and Limitations.
A. Watson, D. Luchins, P. Hanrahan, M. J. Heyrman and A. Lurigio,
28(4): 476-482, 2000
Vol. 29, 2001
Risk Assessment and Release Decision-Making: Toward Resolving the Great Debate.
J. A. Dvoskin and K. Heilbrun,
29(1): 6-10, 2001
Jeffrey Metzner: Twenty-Sixth President of The American Academy of Psychiatry
and the Law.
M. H. Gendel,
29(1): 11-12, 2001
Adventures in the Twilight Zone: Empirical Studies of the Attorney-Expert
Relationship.
T. G. Gutheil,
29(1): 13-17, 2001
Perspectives on the Divorce Process: Parental Perceptions of the Legal System
and Its Impact on Family Relations.
M. K. Pruett and T. D. Jackson,
29(1): 18-28, 2001
Commentary: A Rose of a Different Color.
L. Parley,
29(1): 29-32, 2001
The Psychologically Vulnerable Witness: An Emerging Forensic Consulting Role.
R. I. Simon,
29(1): 33-41, 2001
Commentary: Psychiatric Consultation on Witness Preparation.
R. Slovenko,
29(1): 42-45, 2001
Commentary: Role Conflict for the Witness Consultant.
L. H. Strasburger,
29(1): 46-47, 2001
Antipsychotic Prescribing Patterns in the TexasPrison System.
J. Baillargeon and S. A. Contreras,
29(1): 48-53, 2001
Commentary: Antipsychotic Prescribing Practices in the Texas Prison System.
R. L. Trestman,
29(1): 54-57, 2001
Commentary: Antipsychotic Prescribing Practices in the Texas Prison System.
R. L. Trestman,
29(1): 54-57, 2001
Psychiatric Expertise in the Sentencing Phase of Capital Murder Cases.
K. B. Dekleva,
29(1): 58-67, 2001
Measuring Level of Function in Mentally Ill Prison Inmates: A Preliminary Study.
V. L. Harris and D. Lovell,
29(1): 68-74, 2001
The Rise and Fall of Forensic Hypnosis in Criminal Investigation.
A. W. Newman and J. John W. Thompson,
29(1): 75-84, 2001
Personal Questions onCross-Examination:A Pilot Study of ExpertWitness Attitudes.
T. G. Gutheil, M. L. Commons and P. M. Miller,
29(1): 85-88, 2001
False Prediction of Future Dangerousness: Error Rates and Psychopathy
Checklist-- Revised.
M. David Freedman,
29(1): 89-95, 2001
Race and Spiritualism: Facing Death Row-- A Movie Review of The Green Mile.
E. P. Bath and S. B. Billick,
29(1): 96-99, 2001
Steele v. Hamilton County Community Mental Health Board.
S. G. Noffsinger, S. J. Zuchowski and P. J. Resnick,
29(1): 100-103, 2001
On Making a Travesty of Triability.
R. Slovenko,
29(2): 136-137, 2001
Standards for Informed Consent in Recovered Memory Therapy.
J. Cannell, J. I. Hudson and J. Harrison G. Pope,
29(2): 138-147, 2001
Commentary: How, When, and Whether to Use Informed Consent for Recovered Memory
Therapy.
D. Davis and W. C. F. Elizabeth Loftus,
29(2): 148-159, 2001
Commentary: Informed Consent in Psychotherapy-- A Multidisciplinary Perspective.
R. C. Barden,
29(2): 160-166, 2001
Principles and Narrative in Forensic Psychiatry: Toward a Robust View of
Professional Role.
P. J. Candilis, R. Martinez and C. Dording,
29(2): 167-173, 2001
Commentary: Forensic Psychiatry and Ethics-- the Voyage Continues.
J. R. Ciccone and C. Clements,
29(2): 174-179, 2001
Commentary: A Broadened Conception of Forensic Psychiatric Ethics.
R. Weinstock,
29(2): 180-185, 2001
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Reading Disability, and Personality
Disorders in a Prison Population.
K. Rasmussen and S. L. Roger Almvik,
29(2): 186-193, 2001
Psychiatric Defenses in New York County: Pleas and Results.
S. M. Kirschner and G. J. Galperin,
29(2): 194-201, 2001
Expert Witness Billing Practices Revisited: A Pilot Study of Further Data.
T. G. Gutheil and P. M. M. Michael Lamport Commons,
29(2): 202-206, 2001
Post-Daubert Admissibility of Scientific Evidence on Malingering of
Cognitive Deficits.
B. Vallabhajosula and W. G. vanGorp,
29(2): 207-216, 2001
Physician-Assisted Suicide: Reflections of a Maine Family Physician During the
Jewish High Holidays.
E. Brown,
29(2): 225-231, 2001
Sexual Predator Laws in Canada.
C. R. Graham D. Glancy and J. Bradford,
29(2): 232-237, 2001
A Duty to the Parents of an Allegedly Abused Child? Althaus v. Cohen.
K. J. Weiss,
29(2): 238-240, 2001
A Review of Stephen Soderbergh's Movie, Traffic.
J. R. Merikangas,
29(2): 241-242, 2001
Authorship is Broken.
R. M. Wettstein,
29(3): 270-273, 2001
Boundary Violations: A Culture-Bound Syndrome.
J. Kroll,
29(3): 274-283, 2001
Commentary: Boundaries, Culture, and Psychotherapy.
G. O. Gabbard,
29(3): 284-286, 2001
Commentary: Treatment Boundaries-- Flexible Guidelines,not Rigid Standards.
R. I. Simon,
29(3): 287-289, 2001
Commentary: The Therapeutic Process and Professional Boundary Guidelines.
S. J. Blatt,
29(3): 290-293, 2001
Is Serial Homicide Really Increasing?.
L. B. Schlesinger,
29(3): 294-297, 2001
A Clinical Study of Competency to Consent to Treatment in Pediatrics.
S. B. Billick, G. F. Woodward Burgert III, A. V. Downer and S. M.
Bruni-Solhkhah,
29(3): 298-302, 2001
Seclusion Practice in a Canadian Forensic Psychiatric Hospital.
M. L. A. G. Ahmed,
29(3): 303-309, 2001
Commentary: Seclusion Practice in a Canadian Forensic Hospital.
R. J. O'Shaughnessy,
29(3): 310-312, 2001
The Phantom Expert: Unconsented Use of an Expert's Name and/or Testimony, as a
Legal Strategy.
T. G. Gutheil and J. T. H. Robert I. Simon,
29(3): 313-318, 2001
Boundary Violation Ethics: Some Conceptual Clarifications.
J. Radden,
29(3): 319-326, 2001
Semyon Gluzman and the Unraveling of Soviet Psychiatry.
R. J. Bonnie,
29(3): 327-329, 2001
Law and Psychiatry: The Totalitarian Experience.
S. Gluzman,
29(3): 330-335, 2001
Withholding, Seducing, and Threatening: A Pilot Study of Further Attorney
Pressures on Expert Witnesses.
T. G. Gutheil and P. M. M. Michael Lamport Commons,
29(3): 336-339, 2001
Sexually Violent Predator II: The Sequel.
G. B. Leong and J. A. Silva,
29(3): 340-343, 2001
Clinical and Forensic Aspects of Postpartum Disorders.
L. H. Gold,
29(3): 344-347, 2001
Preserving Balance in Forensic Psychiatry.
S. B. Billick,
29(4): 372-373, 2001
Predictors of Adolescent Psychopathy: The Role of Impulsivity, Hyperactivity,
and Sensation Seeking.
M. J. Vitacco and R. Rogers,
29(4): 374-382, 2001
Six Adoptees Who Murdered: Neuropsychiatric Vulnerabilities and Characteristics
of Biological and Adoptive Parents.
D. O. Lewis, C. A. Yeager, B. Gidlow and M. Lewis,
29(4): 390-397, 2001
"A Fool for a Client": Print Portrayals of 49 Pro Se Criminal Defendants.
D. Mossman and J. Neal W. Dunseith,
29(4): 408-419, 2001
Juvenile and Young Adult Mentally Disordered Offenders: The Role of Child
Neuropsychiatric Disorders.
L. Siponmaa, M. Kristiansson, C. Jonson, A. Nyd‚n and C. Gillberg,
29(4): 420-426, 2001
Juveniles Adjudicated Incompetentto Proceed: A Descriptive Studyof Florida's
CompetenceRestoration Program.
A. McGaha, R. K. Otto, M. D. McClaren and J. Petrila,
29(4): 427-437, 2001
Practical Methods For Detecting Mendacity: A Case Study.
A. R. Hirsch and C. J. Wolf,
29(4): 438-444, 2001
The Ethical Use of Psychology in Criminal Investigations.
J. R. Schafer,
29(4): 445-446, 2001
Are Persecutory Delusions Amenable to Treatment? .
A. R. Felthous, Angeline Stanislaus, A. G. Hempel and R. Gleyzer,
29(4): 461-468, 2001
Prosecution of Illicit Drug Use During Pregnancy: Crystal Ferguson v. City of
Charleston.
R. L. Frierson and M. W. Binkley,
29(4): 469-473, 2001
Vol. 30, 2002
A British Psychiatrist Objects to the Dangerous and Severe Personality Disorder
Proposals.
S. P. Sarkar,
30(1): 6-9, 2002
On a Therapist Serving as a Witness.
R. Slovenko and PhD,
30(1):10-13, 2002
Larry Hollingsworth Strasburger: Twenty-Seventh President of The American
Academy of Psychiatry and the Law.
D. J. Meyer,
30(1): 14-19, 2002
Class Action Litigation in Correctional Psychiatry.
J. L. Metzner,
30(1): 19-29, 2002
The Origins of Commitment for Substance Abuse in the United States.
K. T. Hall and P. S. Appelbaum,
30(1): 33-45, 2002
The Roles of Behavioral Health Professionals in Class Action Litigation.
M. A. Hoge, J. K. Tebes, L. Davidson and E. E. H. Griffith,
30(1): 49-58, 2002
Countering Countertransference: A Forensic Trainee's Dilemma.
S. P. Sattar, D. A. Pinals and T. Gutheil,
30(1): 65-69, 2002
A Comparison of Youth Referred to Psychiatric Emergency Services: Police Versus
Other Sources.
M. E. Evans and R. A. Boothroyd,
30(1): 74-80, 2002
Forensic Psychiatry and the Internet: Practical Perspectives on Sexual Predators
and Obsessional Harassers in Cyberspace.
M. G. McGrath and E. Casey,
30(1): 81-94, 2002
Political Abuse by Psychiatry: An Introduction to the Munro Commentaries.
K. L. Appelbaum,
30(1): 95-96, 2002
Political Psychiatry in Post-MaoChina and its Origins in the Cultural
Revolution.
R. J. Munro,
30(1): 97-106, 2002
Psychiatrists on the Side of the Angels: The Falun Gong and Soviet Jewry.
A. A. Stone,
30(1): 107-111, 2002
The Political Misuse of Psychiatry: An African-Caribbean Perspective.
F. W. Hickling,
30(1): 112-119, 2002
Psychiatry in its Political and Professional Contexts: A Response to Robin
Munro.
S. Lee and A. Kleinman,
30(1): 120-125, 2002
Psychiatric Abuse of Falun Gong Practitioners in China.
S. Y. Lu and V. B. Galli,
30(1): 126-130, 2002
Comparing Soviet and Chinese Political Psychiatry.
R. v. Voren,
30(1): 131-135, 2002
Political Abuse of Psychiatry in the Soviet Union and in China: Complexities and
Controversies.
R. J. Bonnie,
30(1): 136-144, 2002
Political Abuse of Psychiatry in the Soviet Union and China: A Rough Guide for
Bystanders.
J. Birley,
30(1): 145-147, 2002
The Psychological Best Interest of the Child Is Not the Legal Best Interest.
G. H. Miller,
30(2): 196-200, 2002
Killing.
T. Nadelson,
30(2): 201-206, 2002
The Perceived Coerciveness of Involuntary Outpatient Commitment: Findings From
an Experimental Study.
M. S. Swartz, H. R. Wagner, J. W. Swanson and P. Virginia A. Hiday, and
Barbara J. Burns
30(2): 207-217, 2002
Commentary: The Search for a Formula to Relate Competence, Coercion, and
Mandated Treatment
J. Albert J. Grudzinskas,
30(2): 218-220, 2002
Stalking, Threatening, and Harassing Behavior by Psychiatric Patients Toward
Clinicians.
D. A. Sandberg, D. E. McNiel and R. L. Binder,
30(2): 221-229, 2002
Commentary: Stalking, Threatening, and Harassing Behavior by Patients-- The
Risk-Management Response.
J. R. Meloy,
30(2): 230-231, 2002
"I Could Tell You, but Then I'd Have to Kill You": Classified Information in the
Psychiatric Evaluation.
R. D. Malone and D. M. Benedek,
30(2): 232-237, 2002
Violent Behavior, Impulsive Decision-Making, and Anterograde Amnesia While
Intoxicated With Flunitrazepam and Alcohol or Other Drugs: A Case Study in
Forensic Psychiatric Patients.
A. M. Daderman, M. K. Bjorn Fredriksson, L-H. Nilsson and L. Lidberg,
30(2): 238-251, 2002
Competence-to-Stand-Trial Evaluations of Geriatric Defendants.
R. L. Frierson, S. J. Shea and M. E. C. Shea,
30(2): 252-256, 2002
Animal Cruelty and Psychiatric Disorders.
R. Gleyzer, C. E. Holzer, and Alan R. Felthous,
30(2): 257-265, 2002
On the Psychiatric Abuse of Falun Gong and Other Dissenters in China: A Reply to
Stone, Hickling, Kleinman, and Lee.
R. Munro,
30(2): 266-274, 2002
Tarasoff at Twenty-Five.
P. B. Herbert and K. A. Young,
30(2): 275-281, 2002
Penry Revisited: Is Execution of a Person Who Has Mental Retardation
Cruel and Unusual? .
P. B. Herbert and K. A. Young,
30(2): 282-286, 2002
Preserving Children's Protection While Enhancing Justice for Parents in Abuse
and Neglect Evaluations.
R. H. Lubit, S. B. Billick and R. Pizarro,
30(2): 287-290, 2002
Reduced Punishment for Murder in Israel: What Constitutes a Severe Mental
Disorder?
Y. Melamed, R. Mester, G. I. Levertov and J. Margolin,
30(2): 291-294, 2002
Hendricks v. People: Forcing the Insanity Defense on an Unwilling
Defendant.
R. D. Miller,
30(2): 295-297, 2002
AAPL Practice Guideline for Forensic Psychiatric Evaluation of Defendants
Raising the Insanity Defense.
D. Giorgi-Guarnieri, J. Janofsky, E. Keram, S. Lawsky, P. Merideth, D.
Mossman, D. Schwartz-Watts, C. Scott, J. Thompson and H. Zonana,
30(2 Supp): S1-S40, 2002
The Black Mask of Humanity:Racial/Ethnic Discrimination and Post-Traumatic
Stress Disorder
H. F. Butts,
30(3): 336-339, 2002
Suicide Risk Assessment: What Is the Standard of Care?
R. I. Simon,
30(3): 340-344, 2002
Maternal Filicide in Quebec
D. Bourget and P. Gagne,
30(3): 345-351, 2002
Commentary: Pushing a New Classification Schema for Perpetrators of Maternal
Filicide One Step Further
M. K. Pruett,
30(3): 352-354, 2002
Addiction and the Americans with Disabilities Act
L. M. Westreich,
30(3): 355-363, 2002
Commentary: Implementation of the Americans with Disabilities Act in the
Workplace
A. J. Ritchie,
30(3): 364-370, 2002
Temporal Competency in Catatonia
J. M. Bostwick and J. P. Chozinski,
30(3): 371-376, 2002
Commentary: The Evolution of Treatment in Catatonia
G. Mahysych,
30(3): 377-379, 2002
A Cross-Sectional Study of Psychosocial and Criminal Factors Associated with
Arrest in Mentally Ill Female Detainees
H. M. Kravitz, J. L. Cavanaugh and S. S. Rigsbee,
30(3): 380-390, 2002
Factitious Disorders in Civil Litigation: Twenty Cases Illustrating the Spectrum
of Abnormal Illness-Affirming Behavior
S. J. Eisendrath and D. E. McNiel,
30(3): 391-399, 2002
Characteristics of Compensable Disability Patients Who Choose to Litigate
R. I. Lanyon and E. R. Almer,
30(3): 400-404, 2002
Responsibility for Addiction
R. J. Bonnie,
30(3): 405-413, 2002
Quiet Revolution in Scotland
J. A. Baird,
30(3): 414-416, 2002
The Duty to Warn: A Reconsideration and Critique
P. B. Herbert and MD,
30(3): 417-424, 2002
Apology, Justice, and Trauma Recovery
C. Regehr and T. Gutheil,
30(3): 425-430, 2002
Courts as Therapeutic Agents: Thinking Past the Novelty of Mental Health Courts
N. Wolff,
30(3): 431-437, 2002
Vol. 31, 2003
Reflections on Coaching by Attorneyss
T. G. Gutheil,
31(1): 6-9, 2003
Misinformed Regulation of Electronic Medicine Is Unfair to Responsible
Telepsychiatry
T. D. Gunter, Jagannathan Srinivasaraghavan and N. P. Terry,
31(1): 10-14, 2003
Roy O'Shaughnessy: A President to Keep Us Out of Danger
G. D. Glancy,
31(1): 15-17, 2003
Stress and the Forensic Psychiatrist:A Pilot Study
L. H. Strasburger, P. M. Miller, M. L. Commons, T. G. Gutheil and J.
LaLlave,
31(1): 18-26, 2003
Effect of an Individualized Treatment Protocol on Restoration of Competency in
Pretrial Forensic Inpatients
L. J. Bertman, J. John W. Thompson, W. F. Waters, L. Estupinan-Kane, J. A.
Martin and L. Russell,
31(1): 27-35, 2003
Commentary: A Road Map for Research in Restoration of Competency to Stand Trial
C. L. Scott,
31(1): 36-43, 2003
Firesetting in Adolescence and Being Aggressive, Shy, and Rejected by Peers: New
Epidemiologic Evidence from a National Sample Survey
Y.-H. Chen, A. M. Arria and J. C. Anthony,
31(1): 44-52, 2003
Commentary: Models and Correlates of Firesetting Behavior
G. D. Glancy, E. M. Spiers, S. E. Pitt and J. A. Dvoskin,
31(1): 53-57, 2003
Documentation of Violence Risk Information in Psychiatric Hospital Patient
Charts: An Empirical Examination
E. B. Elbogen, A. J. Tomkins, A. P. Pothuloori and M. J. Scalora,
31(1): 58-64, 2003
Commentary: Think Fast, Act Quickly, and Document (Maybe)
R. I. Simon,
31(1): 65-67, 2003
Differences in Personality and Patterns of Recidivism Between Early Starters and
Other Serious Male Offenders
X. Ge, M. B. Donnellan and E. Wenk,
31(1): 68-77, 2003
The Challenge of Selecting Tomorrow's Police Officers from Generations X and Y
F. L. McCafferty,
31(1): 78-88, 2003
Limitations of Brain Imaging in Forensic Psychiatry
D. Reeves, M. J. Mills, S. B. Billick and J. D. Brodie,
31(1): 89-96, 2003
Toyota v. Williams: Determining Disability Under the ADA
S. A. Anfang,
31(1): 97-100, 2003
Atkins v. Virginia: Execution of Mentally Retarded Defendants Revisited
C. L. Scott and J. B. Gerbasi,
31(1): 101-105, 2003
Ring v. Arizona: Who Decides Death? .
C. L. Scott and J. B. Gerbasi,
31(1): 106-109, 2003
Mentally Disordered Offenders as Victims: From Classic Greek Poetry to Modern
Psychiatry
G. A. Alevizopoulos,
31(1): 110-116, 2003
Forensic Psychiatric Evaluation of Workers' Compensation Claims in a
Managed-Care Context
H. J. Bursztajn, Robindra K. Paul, D. M. Reiss and R. M. Hamm,
31(1): 117-119, 2003
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