Index
Jason Warr
(De Montfort University, UK)
ISBN: 978-1-83909-961-8, eISBN: 978-1-83909-960-1
Publication date: 23 November 2020
This content is currently only available as a PDF
Citation
Warr, J. (2020), "Index", Forensic Psychologists, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 211-217. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83909-960-120200011
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2021 Jason Warr. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited
INDEX
Adhesiveness
, 24–25
Adjuncts of disciplinary power
, 123
Adjuncts of penal power. See also Subalterns of penal power
, 1, 123
coerced involvement and ethical blindness
, 134–135
medicalisation and psychology
, 124–126
psychologist as ‘expert’
, 126–130
psychology, power and neutralisation
, 135–141
psychology and bureaucratic forms of power
, 130–134
Advisory Council on Penal System
, 31–32
Alcohol Related Violence (ARV)
, 50
All-encompassing
, 24–25
American Psychological Association
, 41
Armouring
, 180–181
Austerity
, 5, 18–19, 107–108
Authoritative structures
, 23
Avoidance
, 181–182
Bad press
, 5
Bad Psychology: How Forensic Psychology Left Science Behind (Forde)
, 6–7
Banter
, 154–157, 174–175
Becoming New Me 1 (BNM1)
, 50
Behavioural malignancies
, 72
Belief-based, motivators
, 57
Blindness
ethical
, 134–135
moral
, 40–41
British Psychological Society (BPS)
, 34–35, 145
Building Better Relationships (BBR)
, 50
Building Skills for Recovery (BSR)
, 50
Bullying
, 150–154
Burdens
, 167–171
Bureaucracy
, 5, 33, 106, 133–134, 143–144, 184
Bureaucratic forms of power
, 130–134
Bureaucratic legitimacy
, 133–134
Care
, 3, 40, 184
Categorical Imperative
, 62
Chartership
assessment
, 114
process
, 111–116
Choices, Actions, Relationships, Emotions (CARE)
, 50
Coerced involvement
, 134–135
Coercive entities
, 92
Coercive power
, 17–18
Cognition deficiency
, 47–48
Cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT)
, 33
Cognitive impairment
, 64
Cognitive malignancies
, 72
Coherence
, 133
Communicative element
, 11
Conceptual categorisation
, 56
Conceptual variables
, 56
Confirmation bias
, 23–24
Contemporary forensic practitioner role
, 45–46
Control
engendering
, 15–16
of individuals
, 1
social
, 12
ConVerse (newspaper)
, 5
Coping strategies
, 179–180
‘Correctional’ psychologist
, 45
Criminal Justice Act (2010)
, 35–36
Criminal Justice Acts
, 36
Criminality
, 13–14
Criminologically/psychologically positivistic ‘treatment industry’
, 34
Culture
, 38–39
hyper-masculine staff
, 167
staff
, 38–45, 162
Cynic
, 85–89
Cynical Retributive
, 132–133
Cynical Retributivism
, 81
Cynical Retributivist
, 59, 129–130
Cynicism
, 151–152
Defeminised professional façade
, 168
Democratic Therapeutic Community Model (DTC)
, 50
Democratic Therapeutic Community Model Plus (TC+)
, 50
Denial of responsibility
, 138–139
Deviance
, 12–15
Disciplinary capital
, 20–21, 24
deviance
, 12–15
expertise
, 15–21
keepers of gate
, 25–28
knowledge
, 15–21
medicalisation of society
, 12–15
power
, 15–25
prison
, 15–25
psychology
, 21–25
Disciplinary change
, 191
Disciplinary discourses
, 21
Disciplinary interests
, 191
Disciplinary power
, 16–17
Discourse
, 14
Dismissive behaviour
, 110
Domestic Violence Inventory
, 48
Dominance
Impositional Dominance
Isolational Dominance
Dramaturgical conflation
, 43–44
‘Dual-relationship’ problem
, 40–41
Dyadic
, 17
motivations
, 57
relationship
, 19
Egocentric motivators
, 57
Emotion work
, 7–8, 190
Emotional
emotional labour
, 60, 68, 75, 80, 83–88, 118–122, 156
emotive labour
, 60, 63–64, 68, 74–75, 79–80, 88, 121–122, 188–189
malignancies
, 72
management
, 40
work environments
, 39–40
Emotions
, 39–40, 43–44
England
forensic psychology in prison
, 30–31
prison in
, 1
prison system of
, 21–22
psychological services within prisons
, 2, 8
Enhanced Interrogation Techniques
, 41
Enhanced Thinking Skills programme (ETS programme)
, 50–51
Entanglement
, 29
Epistemological themes
, 13–14
Ethical blindness
, 134–135
Ethics
, 27–28, 145
Eugenics
, 11–12
Experience of prison
, 38–45
Expert
, 123–124
psychologist as
, 126–130
Expertise
, 11, 15–21, 130, 140–141, 184
Femininities
, 166–167, 169
Force
, 17–18
Forensic psychological service development
, 30–36
Forensic psychologists. See also Occupational experiences of forensic psychologists
, 1–5, 47, 55, 124, 183
Cynic
, 85–89
Functionalists
, 69–76
Humanists
, 60–69
Idealist
, 81–85
in prison
, 123
Retributivists
, 81
Utilitarians
, 77–81
Forensic psychology
, 6–7, 83–84
in British penal context
, 12
discipline of
, 106–107
historical structure
, 37–38
role in prisons in England and Wales
, 30–31
Free sorting
, 56
Frustration
, 117
Functionalism
, 69
Functionalists
, 8–9, 59, 69–76, 78, 82, 93, 131–132, 184–185, 187–188
Gatekeepers
, 18
Gender
bias
, 166
Gender hostility
, 179
gendered constraints
, 167–171
relations
, 7–8
Goal achievement
, 57
Good order and discipline (GOAD)
, 114–115
Governmentality
, 20
Happiness
, 77
Healthy Identity Intervention (HII)
, 50
Healthy Sex Programme (HSP)
, 50
Hegemonic masculinities
, 166, 178–179, 186
Her Majesty’s Prison and Probation Service (HMPPS)
, 5, 9–10, 26, 30, 36
Equality Policy Statement
, 186
Historical, Clinical and Risk Management-20 (HCR-20)
, 48–49
HMP Dovegate
, 51–52
HMP Gartree
, 51–52
HMP Grendon
, 51–52
HMPS
, 38, 50–51
Horizon
, 50, 51
Human Resource literature
, 57
Humanists
, 8–9, 59–69, 78, 93, 124, 127–128
Hyper-masculine staff culture
, 167
Hypothesised outcomes
, 56
Idealist
, 81–85, 121–122, 126
Identity Matters (IM)
, 50
Impositional dominance by uniformed staff
, 157–159
Imprisonment
, 67, 77, 88–89
In-office meditation
, 159
Incentives and Earned Privileges scheme
, 20–21
Indeterminate Sentences for Public Protection (IPP)
, 35–36
Individuals, control of
, 1
Ineffective knowledge sharing
, 144
Inside Time (newspaper)
, 5, 138–139
Integrated Research Application System (IRAS)
, 25–27
Intellectual and professional challenge
, 96–99
International Personality Disorder Examination (IPDE)
, 48
Interpersonal power
, 186
Interventions
, 71–72, 79–80, 124–125
Intimidating/intimidation
, 150–154, 158, 173
Invasive exploratory surgery
, 125
Isolational dominance by uniformed staff
, 159–163
Juvenile Risk Assessment Scale (J-RAS)
, 48
Kaizen
, 50
Keepers of Gate
, 25–28
Key Performance Targets (KPTs)
, 107
Knowledge
, 15–21
Labour product
, 92–96
Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Prisoners Act (LASPO)
, 35–36
Legitimate power
, 17–18
Level of Service Inventory–Revised (LSI-R)
, 48
Level of Service/Case Management Inventory (LS/CMI)
, 48
Lived experience
, 3
Living as New Me
, 50
Maintaining accuracy
, 133
Managerial ‘interventions’
, 12–13
Managerialism
, 33
Mapping exercise
, 59
Masculinities
, 7–8, 165
hegemonic masculinities
, 166, 178–179, 186
Medical intervention
, 124
Medical model
, 125
of forensic psychology
, 79–80
Medicalisation
of deviance
, 126
processes
, 12
and psychology
, 124–126
of society
, 12–15
Mental discipline
, 17–18
Minimisation
, 175
Ministry of Justice
, 4, 5–7, 30, 38, 52
Modern risk society
, 34
Moral
abeyance
, 23
blindness
, 40–41
Morality
, 1, 113
Multi Agency Public Protection Arrangements (MAPPA)
, 147
National Offender Management Service (NOMS)
, 30, 38, 147
National Research Committee (NRC)
, 25–27
Negative banter
, 157
Negative peer relationships
, 109–111
Neo-liberal political economy
, 1
Neutralisation
, 135–141, 175
New Me Strengths
, 50
New Public Management (NPM)
, 31, 33
Normalisation
, 14–16
Occupational
dissatisfaction
, 102
factors
, 104–109
morality
, 7–8
motivators
, 57
role
, 102–104
satisfaction
, 91–92
Occupational experiences of forensic psychologists. See also Forensic psychologists
, 9, 92
emotional labour
, 119–122
intellectual and professional challenge
, 96–99
labour product
, 92–96
negative peer relationships
, 109–111
occupational dissatisfaction
, 102
occupational factors
, 104–109
occupational role
, 102–104
occupational satisfaction
, 91–92
ontological ambiguity
, 102–104
prosociality and support
, 99–102
relational frustrations
, 117–119
social frustrations
, 117–119
spillage problem
, 119–122
team dynamics
, 109–111
training and career advancement
, 111–116
Offender
, 51–52, 82–83, 124
behaviour
, 125
management
, 143–150
Offender Assessment System (OASys)
, 36, 47–48, 147
Offender Group Re-Conviction Scale (OGRS)
, 48
Offender Management model (OM model)
, 147, 148
Offender Management Units (OMUs)
, 145, 147–150, 182
Offender Personality Disorder pathway
, 5
Offending behaviour
, 140–141
Offending Behaviour Programmes Unit (OBPU)
, 49–50
Ontological ambiguity
, 102–104
Ontological Security
, 57, 111, 148, 187–188
Ontology
, 13, 64
OPDP
, 52
Organisations
, 165
‘Othering’ of people in prison
, 72
Palliating
, 77–78
Panopticism
, 15, 20–21
Paradox. See also Adjuncts of penal power
, 183, 187
Parole Board
, 137–138
Pathologized ‘offender’ labels
, 22
Penal. See also Adjuncts of penal power; Subalterns of penal power
monoliths
, 1
power
, 6
shift
, 20
Penality
, 31
People-centricism
, 61
Physical discipline
, 17–18
Physiological, motivators
, 57
Positivism
, 13, 83
Positivist criminology
, 13–14
Power
, 7–8, 15–25, 123, 135–141, 184, 187
dynamics
, 187
psychology and bureaucratic forms of
, 130–134
Pragmatism
, 74–75
Precision
, 133
Preparation PIPE
, 52
Primary Care Trust
, 31–32
Prison
, 1, 15–25, 29–30, 166
officers
, 2
staff cultures and experience of
, 38–45
Prison Service
, 37–38, 47–50, 53, 70
Prisoners
, 22
Professional discourses
, 15–16
Professional expertise
, 14
Progression PIPE
, 52
Propositioning
, 176–179
Prosociality and support
, 99–102
Provision PIPE
, 52
Psychological services
, 150
development
, 66
Psychologically informed interventions
, 34
Psychologically Informed Planned Environments (PIPEs)
, 5, 51–53
Psychologists
, 154, 184–186, 188–189
as ‘expert’
, 126–130
working in prisons
, 165
Psychology
, 21–25, 135–141
medicalisation and
, 124–126
offender management vs.
, 143–150
of power
, 130–134
Psychology of Criminal Conduct
, 34
Psychopathy Checklist Revised (PCL-R)
, 48–49
Public protection
, 69–71
Quantitative method
, 56
Quasi-psychological mumbo-jumbo
, 138–139
Quintic power
, 187
Rehabilitatedness
, 22–23
Rehabilitation
, 23, 29, 31–32, 34, 51–52, 71, 93–94
Rehabilitative relationship
, 129
Relational frustrations
, 117–119
Repressive welfarism
, 66–67
Resentment
, 25–26
Resolve
, 50
Responsibilisation
, 33, 79
Responsibility
, 97–98
Retributive Idealist
, 59, 85, 121, 148–149
Retributivists
, 8–9, 59, 70, 81, 132, 187–189
Risk
, 29, 31–32
assessments
, 45–46
assuaging
, 34, 124
management
, 45–46
technologies
, 32–33
Risk Matrix 2000 (rm2000)
, 48
Risk of Serious Recidivism (RSR-tool)
, 48
Risk/needs model
, 41–42, 135
‘Risk/needs responsivity’ approach
, 34
Riskiness
, 22–23, 71
Scriptural economy
, 33
Securitised knowledge
, 16
Security
, 145–146
Self-perpetuating logics
, 184
Senior Management Team (SMT)
, 136
Severe and Dangerous Personality Disorder (SDPD)
, 49
Sex discrimination
, 166
Sex Offender Treatment Programmes (SOTP)
, 51, 119, 158, 170
Sexism
, 179
in workplace
, 171–176
Sexual assertiveness
, 178–179
Sexual Violence Risk-20 (SVR-20)
, 48
Sexualised
gossiping
, 20, 176–179
propositioning
, 176–179
Social Darwinism
, 11–12
Social frustrations
, 117–119
Social needs
, 57
Sociality
, 38–39, 187
Societal shift
, 20
Society
, 69–70
Soft power
, 19–20
Spillage problem
, 119–122
Staff cultures of prison
, 38–45, 162
Strain
, 117
Stress
, 117
Structured Assessment of Risk & Need (SARN)
, 48–49
Subalterns of penal power. See also Adjuncts of penal power
banter
, 154–157
impositional dominance by uniformed staff
, 157–159
isolational dominance by uniformed staff
, 159–163
territoriality
, 143–150
uniformed body
, 150–154
Subject
, 82–83
Supervisor
, 45, 99–101, 116
Suspicion
, 151–152
Symbolic attainment
, 191
Symbolic capital
, 7–8, 20–21
Systems of knowledge
, 16
Team dynamics
, 98, 100–101, 109–111
Territorialism
, 185–186
Territoriality
, 143–150
Therapeutic communities
, 51–53
Therapeutons
, 51–52
Thinking Skills Programme (TSP)
, 50
Totality
, 165–166
‘Traditional and sexist’ prison
, 173
Training and career advancement
, 111–116
Treatment
industry
, 6, 29–30, 46–51, 49–50
programmes
, 71–72
2003 Act. See 2003 Criminal Justice Act
2003 Criminal Justice Act
, 36, 47–48
Typology
, 55–56, 190
Uniformed body
, 150–154
Uniformed staff
impositional dominance by
, 157–159
isolational dominance by
, 159–163
‘Us and them’ mentality
, 152–153
‘Usual’ subaltern
, 17
Utilitarianism
, 77
Utilitarians
, 8–9, 59, 59, 77–81, 131–132, 184–185, 187–188
Values
, 97–98
Violence Risk Scale (VRS)
, 48–49
Violent Extremist Risk Assessment v2 (VERA-2)
, 48
Vulnerability
, 6, 128, 160–161
Wales
forensic psychology in prison
, 30–31
prison in
, 1
prison system of
, 21–22
psychological services within prisons
, 2, 8
Well-being
, 127–128
Wild inaccuracies
, 131–132
Women’s Risk/Needs Assessment (WRNA)
, 48
Women’s work
, 170
Workload
, 104–109
Workplace
sexism in
, 171–176
violence
, 173–174
- Prelims
- Chapter 1 Introduction: Forensic Psychology and Her Majesty's Prison Service
- Chapter 2 Disciplinary Capital: Forensic Psychology, Power, and Expertise
- Chapter 3 Risk, Rehabilitation, and the Development of Forensic Psychological Services
- Chapter 4 The Values and Perspectives of Forensic Psychologists
- Chapter 5 Occupational Experiences of Forensic Psychologists
- Chapter 6 Adjuncts of Penal Power
- Chapter 7 Subalterns of Penal Power
- Chapter 8 Gender, Sexism, and the Prison
- Chapter 9 The Paradox of Being Vulnerable Adjuncts
- References
- Index