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Who Done It, Actually? Dissociative Identity Disorder for the Criminologist
Author(s) -
Adah Sachs
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
international journal for crime justice and social democracy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.36
H-Index - 16
eISSN - 2202-7998
pISSN - 2202-8005
DOI - 10.5204/ijcjsd.v4i2.219
Subject(s) - dissociative identity disorder , witness , psychology , relevance (law) , interview , perspective (graphical) , identity (music) , criminology , forensic psychiatry , social psychology , psychiatry , law , political science , computer science , physics , artificial intelligence , acoustics
Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) (American Psychiatric Association 2013) is examined in this paper from the perspective of its relevance to the criminologist. As this psychiatric condition is linked to severe and prolonged childhood abuse, accounts of DID patients inevitably involve reports of serious crimes, in which the person was the victim, perpetrator or witness. These reports can thus contain crucial information for criminal investigations by the police or for court proceedings. However, due to the person’s dissociation, such reports are often very confusing, hard to follow, hard to believe and difficult to obtain. They also frequently state that the person had ‘no choice’, a thorny notion for the criminologist (as well as for the clinician). Through the analysis of clinical examples, the paper explores how decisions are made by a person with DID, the notions of choice and ‘competent reasoning’, and the practical and ethical ways for interviewing a person with DID

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