Availabilities:
Not currently available in 2023
Unit description
Provides students with an overview of the way law and judicial systems affect the individual and how various theories reflect on the process of internalisation of law. Introduces students to psychological and psychoanalytic theories to enable them to assess why some people internalise social prohibitions and other do not. Students will be encouraged to think critically about how psychoanalysis, psychology and psychiatry can help legal practitioners and assess how new studies in the domain of neuroscience contribute to legal reasoning.
Unit content
- How do people internalise law?
- Difference between neurotic, psychotic and perverse subjective structure and their attitude towards social prohibitions
- Crime and subjective attitudes towards punishment
- Shame and guilt
- Psychopaths – lack of remorse and lack of compassion
- Psychiatry and the power of experts in the legal domain
- Problems with forensics fraud
- Neuroscience and law
- CSI effect
- Adolescents and crime
- Psychiatry, crime and genetics
- Psychological problems in legal profession
Learning outcomes
Unit Learning Outcomes express learning achievement in terms of what a student should know, understand and be able to do on completion of a unit. These outcomes are aligned with the graduate attributes. The unit learning outcomes and graduate attributes are also the basis of evaluating prior learning.
On completion of this unit, students should be able to: | |
---|---|
1 | Analyse the connection between psychology and law; |
2 | Assess the role able to be played by psychiatry and psychology in the criminal justice system; |
3 | Critically reflect on fraudulent testimonies; |
4 | Critically analyse the extent, consistency and adequacy of the legal system's appreciation of psychological knowledge in the contexts of the criminal and civil law. |
On completion of this unit, students should be able to:
- Analyse the connection between psychology and law;
- Assess the role able to be played by psychiatry and psychology in the criminal justice system;
- Critically reflect on fraudulent testimonies;
- Critically analyse the extent, consistency and adequacy of the legal system's appreciation of psychological knowledge in the contexts of the criminal and civil law.
Teaching and assessment
Fee information
Domestic
Commonwealth Supported courses
For information regarding Student Contribution Amounts please visit the Student Contribution Amounts.
Fee paying courses
For postgraduate or undergraduate full fee paying courses please check Domestic Postgraduate Fees OR Domestic Undergraduate Fees
International
Please check the international course and fee list to determine the relevant fees.