2009
DOI: 10.1177/0047244109106682
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Psychiatry and criminal justice in modern Germany, 1880—1933

Abstract: This article presents an overview and analysis of the relationship of psychiatry and criminal justice in three different areas: the role of medical expert testimony in criminal trials; the role of psychiatrists in criminological research; and the influence of psychiatry on the penal reform movement. The first section argues that the increased use of medical expert testimony in the criminal courts demonstrates the increasing social acceptance of the psychiatric claim that borderline mental abnormalities were wi… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…67 As part of the professionalisation of psychiatry in the second half of the nineteenth century, Section 51 created the legal basis for the increasing presence of psychiatrists as medical experts in German courts, and for the emergence of forensic psychiatry and criminology as distinct disciplines. 68 When Paul Tesdorpf and his publisher Julius Friedrich Lehmann presented the diagnosis of Wilhelm's mental illness as evidence against his personal guilt for the First World War, they positioned themselves as self-appointed experts in a trial of the exiled emperor. 69 At the time, putting Wilhelm II on trial seemed a real possibility.…”
Section: Courtroom Psychiatry International Politics and The Questiomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…67 As part of the professionalisation of psychiatry in the second half of the nineteenth century, Section 51 created the legal basis for the increasing presence of psychiatrists as medical experts in German courts, and for the emergence of forensic psychiatry and criminology as distinct disciplines. 68 When Paul Tesdorpf and his publisher Julius Friedrich Lehmann presented the diagnosis of Wilhelm's mental illness as evidence against his personal guilt for the First World War, they positioned themselves as self-appointed experts in a trial of the exiled emperor. 69 At the time, putting Wilhelm II on trial seemed a real possibility.…”
Section: Courtroom Psychiatry International Politics and The Questiomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Richard F. Wetzell has helpfully outlined the mutual benefits arising from the medicalisation of penal reform and sees 'the penal reform agenda … significantly influenced by medical theories and practices'. 34 The combination of discourse and casuistry that defined forensic textbooks became determinative for Wulffen's academic case studies as well. The first reference to forensic psychiatry in Wulffen's oeuvre can be found in an eleven-page discussion of the treatment of legal issues in the play Rose Bernd, a 1903 drama by naturalist German writer Gerhart Hauptmann (1862-1946), inspired by Hauptmann's jury service on the case of child murderer Hedwig Otte.…”
Section: Embracing the Casementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the last two decades of the nineteenth century, reformers went even further by demanding that the state abandon retributive justice set in stone by moral philosophy and turn to empirical science, focusing on the causes of crime instead. This new understanding was to be reflected in a penal reform, in which the criminal would not be punished, but reformed and eventually reintegrated into society (Wetzell, 2009). Despite the best intentions, the penal reform was not achieved in the nineteenth century and was only implemented in a distorted manner, by the Nazis, in the next century.…”
Section: Criminal Responsibility and Reformmentioning
confidence: 99%