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Chapter 1: Forensic Psychology ๐Ÿง โš–๏ธ

Introduction

Forensic Psychology deals with the psychological aspects of law and legal processes, especially in courts. "Forensic" means anything related to law. It's not just about criminals; it includes courts, police, lawyers, crime investigations, child custody, victim support, jury selection, police training, and criminal behavior.

Brain illustration

Wrightsman: forensic psychology = applying psychological knowledge to tasks faced by the legal system.

Bartel & Bartel: it's both research (like eyewitness memory, jury decisions, criminal behavior) and professional practice (criminal & civil law, legal consultations).

Applications

Scales of justice

What a Forensic Psychologist May Do

Magnifying glass

History ๐Ÿ•ฐ๏ธ

The legal system used medical experts for insanity ๐Ÿฅ

Forensic psychology started around 1908 with Hugo Mรผnsterberg's On the Witness Stand ๐Ÿ“š

Early contributions: J. McKeen Cattell (testimony experiments), William Healy (Juvenile Psychopathic Institute, 1909)

Insanity defense: Mโ€™Naghten case 1843 โš–๏ธ

APA created forensic psychology division in 2001 โœ…

Courts now need psychologists for assessing mental states of criminals, as judges cannot evaluate psychological disorders themselves. Only trained psychologists (not psychiatrists) can work in forensic psychology.

Old book

In Pakistan ๐Ÿ‡ต๐Ÿ‡ฐ

Forensic psychology is very new and still developing. Globally, the field is growing:

Globe

Path to Become a Forensic Psychologist

  1. ๐Ÿฅ Become a clinical psychologist first
  2. ๐ŸŽฏ Specialize in forensic psychology
Graduation cap

Focus Areas

Research tools

Key Milestones, Figures, and Researches

Important Figures: Hugo Mรผnsterberg, J. McKeen Cattell, William Healy, Wrightsman, Bartel & Bartel

Important Researches: On the Witness Stand, testimony experiments, Juvenile Psychopathic Institute

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