Holland T, Clare I C H, Mukhopadhyay T
University of Cambridge, Department of Psychiatry, Douglas House, 18b Trumpington Road, Cambridge CB2 2AH, UK.
J Intellect Disabil Res. 2002 May;46 Suppl 1:6-20. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2788.2002.00001.x.
The investigation of the relationship between criminal offending and the presence of an intellectual disability (ID) is problematic for two main reasons. First, because of problems associated with the definition of 'ID' and secondly, because much criminal offending goes undetected or unreported, and studies can only investigate those already involved with the criminal justice process. Studies using IQ as a continuous variable indicate that significantly below-average intellectual ability is an independent predictor of future offending. Whilst people with ID may be over-represented in parts of the criminal justice system, given the intellectual and other psychosocial disadvantages which they experience, the level of offending behaviour in this particularly vulnerable group is strikingly low. The present authors propose that two broad groups of people can be identified. The first, broader, group is one of people for whom social disadvantage and mental ill health (particularly substance abuse), coupled with a significant intellectual impairment, are the main characteristics. Secondly, there is a smaller group of people, usually already known to ID services as service users, but for whom the process whereby what might have been conceptualized as 'challenging behaviour' becomes 'offending' is far from clear. The distinction the present authors make between challenging behaviour and offending is important for understanding how 'difficult' behaviour becomes identified as 'antisocial/criminal behaviour'. They argue that research needs to move from prevalence and descriptive studies to investigating the processes which determine movement in and out the criminal justice system. The present political emphasis on public protection and proposals for significantly broader mental health legislation raise the danger of a re-expansion of institutional models of care, rather than the development of multi-agency support networks. The present paper underscores a note of caution, particularly where choices have to be made between expanding institutional models on the one hand and providing more integrated services on the other. Over and above policy decisions, these are social and political choices.
对犯罪行为与智力残疾(ID)之间关系的调查存在问题,主要有两个原因。其一,由于与“智力残疾”定义相关的问题;其二,因为许多犯罪行为未被发现或未被举报,而研究只能调查那些已经涉及刑事司法程序的人。使用智商作为连续变量的研究表明,智力能力显著低于平均水平是未来犯罪的一个独立预测因素。虽然智力残疾者在刑事司法系统的某些部分可能占比过高,但考虑到他们所经历的智力和其他心理社会劣势,这个特别弱势群体的犯罪行为水平却出奇地低。本文作者提出可以识别出两大类人群。第一类,也是更广泛的一类,是那些以社会劣势和精神健康问题(特别是药物滥用)以及严重智力障碍为主要特征的人。其次,有一小群人,通常作为服务对象已为智力残疾服务机构所熟知,但对于他们来说,原本可能被概念化为“挑战性行为”如何变成“犯罪行为”的过程却远不清楚。本文作者对挑战性行为和犯罪行为所做的区分,对于理解“困难”行为如何被认定为“反社会/犯罪行为”很重要。他们认为,研究需要从患病率和描述性研究转向调查决定进出刑事司法系统的过程。当前政治上对公共保护的强调以及大幅扩大精神健康立法的提议,增加了护理机构模式重新扩张的风险,而非多机构支持网络的发展。本文强调要谨慎,特别是在必须在一方面扩大机构模式和另一方面提供更综合服务之间做出选择时。除了政策决定之外,这些都是社会和政治选择。