Psychiatry and law : how are they related?

From Wikivideos

Video source record: https://collections.nlm.nih.gov/catalog/nlm%3Anlmuid-8800432A-vid

Psychiatry and law : how are they related?
0:00 / --:--

Player mode uses your custom Wikivideos controls.

Summary

Description This film, part of a series produced by the U.S. National Medical Audiovisual Center, presents a discussion about the role of the psychiatrist in criminal law, courtroom, and prison. Alexander Brooks of the Rutgers University Law School moderates. Panelists Dr. Thomas Szasz and Dr. Bernard Diamond take opposing views. Szasz argues that psychiatry is used to manipulate both the law and the defendant, and is not applied in any scientific way in the courtroom, nor can it be. Throughout his career, Szasz contended that mental illness was a myth, and that a medical, neuro-diagnostic model was not useful for understanding the human struggle. Dr. Bernard Diamond, who developed the "diminished capacity" legal defense and testified on behalf of Sirhan Sirhan during his trial for the assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy, argues that defendants can be mentally ill or impaired and that this must be assessed by psychiatrists and considered in trial strategy and in sentencing. Credits: Thomas
Source collections.nlm.nih.gov
Author Szasz, Thomas, 1920-2012., Diamond, Bernard L. (Bernard Lee), 1912-, National Medical Audiovisual Center., United States. Public Health Service.

Licensing

Public Domain

Attribution: Szasz, Thomas, 1920-2012., Diamond, Bernard L. (Bernard Lee), 1912-, National Medical Audiovisual Center., United States. Public Health Service.

View original file record