Ressources en psychocriminologie, psychologie forensique et criminologie
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THE GUARDIAN (23/11/14) UK’s mentally ill people more likely to be found in jail than hospital

Each decade in Britain appears to contain a symbolic, heinous murder – a crime so awful that it reflects a nation’s pathologies as well as its fears. In the 1990s, the death of James Bulger, a two-year-old who was abducted from a Merseyside shopping centre before being tortured and killed, led to the age of criminal responsibility being changed.

The next decade began with the case of 10-year-old Damilola Taylor, who bled to death after being assaulted on a south London stairwell, presaging years of concern over the rise of such attacks.

This month has seen a gruesome case which again holds up a mirror to the state of Britain. The events that led to Matthew Williams, found eating the face and eyeball of a 22-year-old woman he had lured into his room at Caerphilly’s Sirhowy Arms hotel, can be used to give a diagnosis of one of society’s most visceral ills: that prisons, not hospitals, are the place to find the mentally disturbed.

There are about 16,000 mental health beds in the NHS, while the Centre for Mental Health estimates that about 21,000 people behind bars – a quarter of the total prison population – have bipolar disorder, depression or personality disorders.

Prisons also disproportionately house those who have the most serious mental illnesses. About a quarter of women and 15% of men in prison reported psychotic episodes. The rate among the general public is about 4%.

Williams, who had had paranoid schizophrenia since he was a teenager, had been released from jail two weeks before the attack. He appeared to be a man lost, prey to delusions and hallucinations that had haunted him for years.

It’s certainly what his mother, Sally Ann Williams, thought. Interviewed by the BBC days after the murder, she claimed her son had been unable to access the medication he needed to keep his condition in check. She argued that her son, who died after police fired a Taser at him to try to force him away from his victim, should have been in hospital rather than living with little or no supervision in the community.

None of this surprises Jeremy Coid, professor of forensic psychiatry at Queen Mary University of London. He points out that less than 25% of prisoners who screen positive for psychosis subsequently received an appointment with a mental health professional after release. In a paper last year he said that failing to effectively screen prisoners’ mental health inevitably led to tragedy.

He told the Guardian: “Our work, which looked at 1,000 cases, showed released prisoners with schizophrenia are three times more likely to be violent than other prisoners, but only if they receive no treatment or follow-up support from mental health services.”

It did not have to be like this. In the dying days of the last Labour administration, ministers produced the Bradley report – a blueprint for reform of the criminal justice system and healthcare to ensure that prisoners did not languish behind bars without help. Ministers had been spurred into action by a series of hard-hitting warnings from charities such as the Prison Reform Trust, which pointed out that a third of prisons frequently saw prisoners who were too ill to be in jail.

However, the Bradley report was shelved by this government, which instead has brought about huge upheavals in the prison service and the NHS. In the past three years the public prison service has seen its budget cut by £263m and is struggling to cope with the loss of more than 12,500 (28%) of its staff since 2010 at a time of an ever-rising prison population. Probation services that will oversee the “medium and low risk” released prisoners are to be privatised.

At the same time the health service has undergone radical change. Budgets have been outstripped by patient demand, especially in mental health. In the summer the Royal College of Psychiatrists warned that NHS mental health services were “running dangerously close to collapse”. Analysis by the Health Service Journal found that there were now 3,640 fewer nurses and 213 fewer doctors working in mental health compared with two years ago.

Juliet Lyons of the Prison Reform Trust wants an independent inquiry into the issue of prisoner mental health, saying that the proposed “serious further offence review” into the Williams case does not go far enough.

Retrouvez l’intégralité de l’article sur le site du Guardian

CHAMP PÉNAL (Vol. XI | 2014 Parentalités enfermées/Objets et enfermement/Probation française) La probation française entre permanence et changement

La probation française entre permanence et changement

TED talks (2012) Jackson Katz: Violence against women—it’s a men’s issue

Domestic violence and sexual abuse are often called « women’s issues.” But in this bold, blunt talk, Jackson Katz points out that these are intrinsically men’s issues — and shows how these violent behaviors are tied to definitions of manhood. A clarion call for us all — women and men — to call out unacceptable behavior and be leaders of change.

Jackson Katz is an educator, author, filmmaker and cultural theorist who is a pioneer in the fields of gender violence prevention education and media literacy. He is co-founder of Mentors in Violence Prevention (MVP), which enlists men in the struggle to prevent men’s violence against women. Celebrating its 20th anniversary this year, MVP has become a widely used sexual and domestic violence prevention initiative in college and professional athletics across North America. Katz and his MVP colleagues have also worked extensively with schools, youth sports associations and community organizations, as well as with all major branches of the U.S. military.

TED Talks (2013) Gary Slutkin: Let’s treat violence like a contagious disease (VOST)

Physician Gary Slutkin spent a decade fighting tuberculosis, cholera and AIDS epidemics in Africa. When he returned to the United States, he thought he’d escape brutal epidemic deaths. But then he began to look more carefully at gun violence, noting that its spread followed the patterns of infectious diseases. A mind-flipping look at a problem that too many communities have accepted as a given. We’ve reversed the impact of so many diseases, says Slutkin, and we can do the same with violence. (Filmed at TEDMED.)

Gary Slutkin (Epidemiologist) Could our culture have misdiagnosed violence? As the director of the initiative Cure Violence, Gary Slutkin approaches gunfire on neighborhood streets as a contagious disease, looking to science and public health for strategies to stop it.

FRANCE CULTURE, Emission « Concordance des temps » (08/11/2014) La prise d’otage : une arme ancienne

Hans-Martin Schleyer, otage de la Fraction armée rouge à Cologne en 1977

Les supplices répétés qui sont infligés par le soi-disant Etat islamique et ses affiliés à des otages capturés, et dont l’horreur est diffusée par tous les moyens modernes de la communication, s’imposent constamment à l’attention dans la vie internationale, au seuil d’un siècle qui pourrait bien n’être pas moins sanglant que celui qui l’a précédé. L’otage est en passe de devenir de la sorte une figure obsédante. Et pourtant il ne s’agit pas, chacun le sait bien, chacun le sent bien, d’une invention contemporaine. Bien au contraire, il a été présent depuis plus de trois millénaires au moins, depuis l’Antiquité la plus reculée. Et cependant la pratique de la prise d’otage a beaucoup varié, quant à ses finalités et conséquences dans la vie des peuples, en face d’eux-mêmes et en face des autres. Ce qui peut renseigner sur l’évolution, entre permanences et ruptures, des relations internationales et parfois des déchirements intestins, d’époque en époque. Tel est donc le parcours à quoi je vais vous convier ce matin. Ce sera en compagnie de Gilles Ferragu, ancien membre de l’Ecole française de Rome et maître de conférences en histoire contemporaine à l’Université de Paris Ouest Nanterre. Gilles Ferragu qui a le goût, comme il l’a montré dans divers ouvrages remarqués, de s’interroger, dans la longue durée, sur un sujet qui est d’une prégnance si forte dans notre actualité. Jean-Noël Jeanneney

Programmation sonore :

– Extrait du film « Du Guesclin » de Bernard LATOUR, avec Fernand GRAVERY, 1949.

– Déclaration de Philippe PETAIN le 22 octobre 1941, suivi de la déclaration du Général DE GAULLE à la BBC le 23 octobre 1941.

– Extrait des Fourberies de Scapin de MOLIERE, avec Louis DE FUNES et François PERIER, 1954.

– Extrait d’un entretien avec Jean-Louis NORMANDIN, au micro de Jacques MUNIER, dans Les chemins de la connaissance sur France Culture, le 4 octobre 2004.

– Extrait d’Inter-Actualités sur le drame des Jeux Olympiques de Munich, présenté par Yves MOUROUSI et Christian BILLMANN, sur France Inter le 5 septembre 1972.

– Extrait d’un discours de Laurent FABIUS devant l’Assemblée Nationale, à propos des otages eu Liban et de la responsabilité de l’Etat, en mars 1986.

Bibliographie :  Gilles FERRAGU, Histoire du terrorisme, Perrin, 2014;  Gérard JAEGER, Prises d’otages. De l’enlèvement des Sabines à Ingrid Betancourt, l’Archipel, 2009.

TED TALKS; Matthieu Ricard (octobre 2014) How to let altruism be your guide

Décrypter les méandres du cerveau et détecter les pulsions criminelles demeurent du domaine de la science-fiction, mais la réalité s’en approche peu à peu.

À l’Institut Philippe-Pinel de Montréal, des chercheurs mettent au point des procédés utilisant diverses technologies et la réalité virtuelle pour évaluer les risques de récidive chez les gens reconnus coupables de crimes à caractère sexuel et chez les pédophiles.

Christian Joyal est professeur en neuropsychologie à l’Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières et coresponsable du Laboratoire d’applications de réalité virtuelle en psychiatrie légale à l’Institut Philippe-Pinel (ARVIPL). Pour la première fois, il nous a ouvert les portes de son laboratoire.

Marie-Ève Cousineau nous a préparé un reportage sur les recherches de Christian Joyal et son équipe.


Le reportage de Marie-Ève Cousineau (dec 2014)