From the biological to the mixed method of determining mental incompetency in criminal law

The authors have analysed first the evolution of the ideas concerning the phenomenon of the mentally ill throughout history, up to the modern concept of mental illness and disorder. This approach to the treatment of the material was necessary because it is clear that the contents, as well as the leg...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Drakić Dragiša, Drakić Gordana
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Belgrade, Faculty of Law, Belgrade, Serbia 2018-01-01
Series:Anali Pravnog Fakulteta u Beogradu
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0003-2565/2018/0003-25651803158D.pdf
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Summary:The authors have analysed first the evolution of the ideas concerning the phenomenon of the mentally ill throughout history, up to the modern concept of mental illness and disorder. This approach to the treatment of the material was necessary because it is clear that the contents, as well as the legal significance, of the institute of incompetency is heavily dependent on the prevalent concept of psychopathology. The authors assert that the current approach to the institute of mental incompetency, which was in the beginning determined by application of the biological method, appeared in the beginning of the nineteenth century, with the adoption of the then predominant psychiatric teachings on mental illness. Further in the text the authors highlight the advantages and disadvantages of this method. In an attempt to limit the growing psychiatric influence on criminal law, a new, psychological method for determining mental incompetency was conceived in time. Due to obvious shortcomings, this method has never managed to affirm itself, neither in theory, nor in criminal law. The authors have dedicated the final part of their work to the detailed examination of the biological-psychological method of determining mental incompetency, which was devised in reaction to the disadvantages of the previous two methods. They stress that, unlike these methods, the mixed method ensures legal certainty because it clearly divides jurisdiction between the judge and expert witness-psychiatrist in the proving of a person's mental incompetency. Finally, it also affirms one of the most important achievements of the modern criminal responsibility principle - the linking of criminal responsibility to a certain crime and the moment in which it was committed.
ISSN:0003-2565
2406-2693