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Forensic Psychologists

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Built on a large body of research relating specifically to forensic psychologists and prison life more generally, this book examines how this professional discipline has become central to life with...
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  • 23 November 2020
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This book explores how forensic psychology has come to inhabit a central unifying discursive presence in the life world of modern carceral institutions. Providing a sociological and qualitative account of forensic practitioner psychologists, the author looks both in, and alongside, the work of such practitioners to explore how they simultaneously occupy positions of power and vulnerability.

Focusing not only on how practitioners themselves come to embody a pervasive system of disciplinary expertise, but also on how they experience other forms of penal control, the book offers a novel and complete exploration of forensic psychology, the modern prison, and power.

This is an accessible text for prison practitioners, criminological and sociological researchers and forensic psychologists on the nature and reality of forensic psychological practice in the contemporary prisons of England and Wales.

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Price: $111.99
Pages: 240
Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
Imprint: Emerald Publishing Limited
Publication Date: 23 November 2020
ISBN: 9781839099618
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, Criminal or forensic psychology, LAW / Forensic Science, LAW / Legal Education, LAW / Legal Profession
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This is a landmark study of the distinct form that psychological power has come to take in prison, despite being wielded by an insecure, beleaguered workforce. It is written with insight and imagination. The prison is a place of punishment, and yet it seeks to 'remake' the prisoner. The forensic psychologist has come to lie at the heart of this contradiction, largely serving the institutions' interests using a new, and flawed, 'disciplinary capital'. Jason Warr’s analysis of just how 'entangled with power' they have become is original, critical, and shrewd.

Jason Warr is Senior Lecturer in Criminology and Criminal Justice at De Montfort University, UK. He has conducted research in a number of criminal justice settings and has written on topics as diverse as the emotional geographies of prison, Titan prisons, the pains of imprisonment, narrative criminology, and sensory penalities and criminology.

Chapter 1. Introduction: Forensic Psychology and Her Majesty’s Prison Service.
Chapter 2. Disciplinary Capital: Forensic Psychology, Power, and Expertise.
Chapter 3. Risk, Rehabilitation, and the Development of Forensic Psychological Services.
Chapter 4. The Values and Perspectives of Forensic Psychologists.
Chapter 5. Occupational Experiences of Forensic Psychologists.
Chapter 6. Adjuncts of Penal Power.
Chapter 7. Subalterns of Penal Power.
Chapter 8. Gender, Sexism, and the Prison.
Chapter 9. The Paradox of Being Vulnerable Adjuncts.