Baskin-Sommers Arielle, Williams Alex, Benson-Williams Callie, Ruiz Sonia, Ricard Jordyn R, Camacho Jorge
Department of Psychology, Yale University, 100 College St, New Haven, CT, 06510, USA.
Yale Law School, 127 Wall St, New Haven, CT, 06511, USA.
Commun Psychol. 2024 Apr 30;2(1):38. doi: 10.1038/s44271-024-00090-9.
The footprint of the legal system in the United States is expansive. Applying psychological and neuroscience research to understand or predict individual criminal behavior is problematic. Nonetheless, psychology and neuroscience can contribute substantially to the betterment of the criminal legal system and the outcomes it produces. We argue that scientific findings should be applied to the legal system through systemwide policy changes. Specifically, we discuss how science can shape policies around pollution in prisons, the use of solitary confinement, and the law's conceptualization of insanity. Policies informed by psychology and neuroscience have the potential to affect meaningful-and much-needed-legal change.
美国法律体系的影响范围广泛。运用心理学和神经科学研究来理解或预测个体犯罪行为存在问题。尽管如此,心理学和神经科学能够为刑事法律体系及其产生的结果的改善做出重大贡献。我们认为,科学发现应通过全系统的政策变革应用于法律体系。具体而言,我们将讨论科学如何能够塑造围绕监狱污染、单独监禁的使用以及法律对精神错乱的概念化等方面的政策。由心理学和神经科学提供信息的政策有可能促成有意义且急需的法律变革。