𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
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Professional convergence in forensic practice

✍ Scribed by Dave Mercer; Tom Mason; Joel Richman


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
98 KB
Volume
10
Category
Article
ISSN
1324-3780

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✦ Synopsis


ABSTRACT

This paper outlines the development and convergence of forensic science and secure psychiatric services in the UK, locating the professionalization of forensic nursing within a complex web of political, economic, and ideological structures. It is suggested that a stagnation of the therapeutic enterprise in high and medium security provision has witnessed an intrusion of medical power into the societal body. Expanding technologies of control and surveillance are discussed in relation to the move from modernity to postmodernity and the ongoing dynamic of medicalized offending. Four aspects of globalization are identified as impacting upon the organization and application of forensic practice: (i) organized capitalism and the exhaustion of the welfare state; (ii) security versus danger and trust versus risk; (iii) science as a meta‐language; and (iv) foreclosure as a mechanism of censorship. Finally, as a challenge for the profession, some predictions are offered about the future directions or demise of forensic nursing.


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