Here's the reading list for my undergraduate Forensic Psychology course. You can buy the books for less than $150, and you can access most of the articles online for free. (Too bad that the Dave Nichols article on Jeffrey Dahmer isn't easily accessible; it might be the best article ever written about a serial murderer.)
“Reading maketh a full man; and writing an exact man. And, therefore, if a man write little, he need have a present wit; and if he read little, he need have much cunning to seem to know which he doth not.”
-- Francis Bacon
Just think about how much more you will know about forensic psychology after you read all this. Exciting, isn't it? Try starting with one article a day for the next 10 days.
Capote, T. (1966/2002). In cold blood. New York: Random House.
Douglas, J. (1999). The anatomy of motive. New York: Scribner.
Ewing, C.P., & McCann, J.T. (2006). Minds on trial: Great cases in law and psychology. New York: Oxford University Press.
Lykken, D.T. (1995). The antisocial personalities. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
REQUIRED READINGS
Arrigo, B.A., & Bullock, J.L. (2008). The psychological effects of solitary confinement on prisoners in Supermax units. International Journal of Offender Therapy
and Comparative Criminology, 52(6),
622-640.
Beasley, J.O.
(2004). Serial murder in America: Case studies of seven offenders. Behavioral Sciences and the Law, 22, 395-414.
Beckman, M. (2004). Crime, culpability, and the adolescent brain. Science, 305, 596-599.
Dalrymple, T.
(2001). Tough love. In Life at the Bottom: The Worldview that makes the Underclass, pp. 36-47. Chicago, IL:
Ivan R. Dee.
Dobson, V., &
Sales, B. (2000). The science of infanticide and mental illness. Psychology, Public Policy, and Law, 6, 1098-1112.
Fein, R.A., &
Vossekuil, B. (1999). Assassination in the United States: An operational studyof recent assassins, attackers, and near-lethal approachers. Journal of Forensic Science, 44(2), 321-333.
Gladwell, M.
(2007). Dangerous minds: Criminal profiling made easy. New Yorker, 11/12/07, 36-45.
Knoll, J. (2010). The "pseudocommando" mass murderer: Part I, the psychology of revenge and obliteration. Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law, 38, 87-94.
Knoll, J. (2010). The "pseudocommando" mass murderer: Part I, the psychology of revenge and obliteration. Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law, 38, 87-94.
Lykken, D.T.
(1998). The case for parental licensure. In T.Millon, E. Simonsen, M.
Birket-Smith, & R.D. Davis (Eds.), Psychopathy:
antisocial, criminal, and violent behavior (pp. 122-143). New York:
Guildford Press.
Meloy, J.R.
(1997). Predatory violence during mass murder. Journal of Forensic Science, 42,
326-329.
Meloy, J.R.
(2003). When stalkers become violent: The threat to public figures and private lives.
Psychiatric Annals, 33(10), 658-665.
Meloy, J.R. (2004). Indirect personality assessment of the violent true believer. Journal of Personality Assessment, 82, 138-146.
Meloy, J.R. (2004). Indirect personality assessment of the violent true believer. Journal of Personality Assessment, 82, 138-146.
Menninger, W.W.
(2007). Uncontained rage: A psychoanalytic perspective on violence. Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic, 71(2), 115-131.
Morse, S.J.
(2003). Bad or mad?: Sex offenders and social control. In Bruce J. Winick and
John Q. La Fond (eds.), Protecting
Society from Sexually Dangerous Offenders: Law, Justice, and Therapy, pp.
165-182. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Mullen, P.E.
(2004). The autogenic (self-generated) massacre. Behavioral Sciences and the Law, 22, 787-79311-323.
Napier, M.R.,
& Adams, S.H. (1998). Magic words to obtain confessions. FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin, October,
11-15.
Nichols, D.S.
(2006). Tell me a story: MMPI responses and personal biography in the case of a serial killer. Journal of Personality
Assessment, 86(3), 242-262.
No author (nd). Famous American Trials: The John Hinckley Trial (1982). Retrieved from: http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/hinckley/hinckleytrial.html
No author (nd). Famous American Trials: The John Hinckley Trial (1982). Retrieved from: http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/hinckley/hinckleytrial.html
O’Shea, B.
(2003). Factitious disorders: the Baron’s legacy. International Journal of Psychiatry in Clinical Practice, 7, 33-39.
Phillips, R.T.M.
(2006). Assessing Presidential stalkers and assassins. Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and Law, 34, 154-164.
Pinizotto, A.J.,
Davis, E.F., & Miller, C.E. (2007 January). The deadly mix: Officers,offenders, and the circumstances that bring them together. FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin, 1-10.
Reid, W.H. (2007,
May). The insanity defense: Bad or mad or both? Journal of Psychiatric Practice, 169-172.
Schlesinger, L.B.
(2003). A case study involving competency to stand trial: Incompetent defendant, incompetent examiner, or “malingering by proxy”? Psychology, Public Policy, and Law, 9, 381-399.
Schlesinger, L.B.
(2009). Psychological profiling: Investigative implications from crime scene analysis. The Journal of Psychiatry &
Law, 37, 73-84.
Shackelford,
T.K., Buss, D.M., & Weekes-Shackelford, V.A. (2003). Wife killings committed in the context of a lovers’ triangle. Basic and Applied Social Psychology, 25, 137-143.
Silva, J.A.,
Leong, G.B., & Ferrari, M.M. (2004). A neuropsychiatric developmental modelof serial homicidal behavior. Behavioral
Sciences and the Law, 22,
787-799.
Slovenko, R.
(2003). The insanity defense: Matricide in a French Quarter hotel. The Journal of Psychiatry & Law, 31, 251-284.
Vann, D. (2008).
Portrait of the school shooter as a young man. Retrieved from http://www.esquire.com/features/steven-kazmierczak-0808.
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