All Stories

  1. An Economic Analysis of Crime Costs Associated with Psychopathic Personality Disorder and Violence Risk
  2. Forecasting Stalking Recidivism Using the Guidelines for Stalking Assessment and Management (SAM)
  3. "Examining the incremental and interactive effects of boldness with meanness and disinhibition within the triarchic model of psychopathy": Correction.
  4. Evaluating the Test Validity of the Comprehensive Assessment of Psychopathic Personality Symptom Rating Sale (CAPP SRS)
  5. Interrater Reliability and Concurrent Validity of the Risk for Sexual Violence Protocol for Korean Sexual Offenders: A Field Study
  6. Death is different: Reply to Olver et al. (2020).
  7. Are Psychopathic Traits Associated with Core Social Networks? An Exploratory Study in University Students
  8. Statement of concerned experts on the use of the Hare Psychopathy Checklist—Revised in capital sentencing to assess risk for institutional violence.
  9. Interrater reliability, concurrent validity, and predictive validity of the risk for sexual violence protocol.
  10. The dimensionality of the hare psychopathy checklist-revised, revisited: Its purported multidimensionality might well be artifactual
  11. Violence risk identification, assessment, and management practices in inpatient psychiatry.
  12. Prevalence and Nature of Structural Brain Abnormalities in Batterers: A Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study
  13. Comparing the lexical similarity of the triarchic model of psychopathy to contemporary models of psychopathy
  14. Serial stalking of mental health professionals: Case presentation, analysis, and formulation using the Guidelines for Stalking Assessment and Management (SAM).
  15. Handbook of Forensic Mental Health Services
  16. The Taxonic Latent Structure and Taxometrics in Forensic Mental Health
  17. Examining the incremental and interactive effects of boldness with meanness and disinhibition within the triarchic model of psychopathy.
  18. Culture and violence risk assessment: The case of Ewert v. Canada.
  19. Psychometric properties of the Hare Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R) in a representative sample of Canadian federal offenders.
  20. Ewert v. Canada: Postscript.
  21. The mind of the male batterer: A neuroscience perspective
  22. Are Psychopathic and Borderline Personality Disorder Distinct, or Differently Gendered Expressions of the Same Disorder? An Exploration Using Concept Maps
  23. Construct Validity of the Comprehensive Assessment of Psychopathic Personality (CAPP) Concept Map: Getting Closer to the Core of Psychopathy
  24. Can the causal mechanisms underlying chronic, serious, and violent offending trajectories be elucidated using the psychopathy construct?
  25. The role of psychopathic traits and developmental risk factors on offending trajectories from early adolescence to adulthood: A prospective study of incarcerated youth
  26. The role of symptoms of psychopathy in persistent violence over the criminal career into full adulthood
  27. An Examination of Violence Risk Communication in Practice Using a Structured Professional Judgment Framework
  28. Domains of psychopathy: Evaluating the structure of a lexical model of psychopathic personality disorder.
  29. Remorse, psychopathology, and psychopathy among adolescent offenders.
  30. Risk assessment and communication.
  31. Cross-language consistency of the Comprehensive Assessment of Psychopathic Personality (CAPP) model.
  32. Historical-Clinical-Risk Management-20, Version 3 (HCR-20V3): Development and Overview
  33. Psychopathic traits and offending trajectories from early adolescence to adulthood
  34. Predictive validity of dynamic factors: Assessing violence risk in forensic psychiatric inpatients.
  35. Assessment and Management of Risk for Intimate Partner Violence by Police Officers Using the Brief Spousal Assault Form for the Evaluation of Risk
  36. Expert Evidence About Violence Risk Assessment: A Study of Canadian Legal Decisions
  37. Workplace Assessment of Targeted Violence Risk: The Development and Reliability of the WAVR‐21
  38. Using the HCR-20 to Predict Aggressive Behavior among Men with Schizophrenia Living in the Community: Accuracy of Prediction, General and Forensic Settings, and Dynamic Risk Factors
  39. Another Look at the (Im-)Precision of Individual Risk Estimates Made Using Actuarial Risk Assessment Instruments
  40. Violent and Sexual Offenders
  41. Current issues in the assessment and diagnosis of psychopathy (psychopathic personality disorder)
  42. Explicating the Construct of Psychopathy: Development and Validation of a Conceptual Model, the Comprehensive Assessment of Psychopathic Personality (CAPP)
  43. Critical Issues in the Assessment of Adolescent Psychopathy: An Illustration Using Two Case Studies
  44. Sexual Violence Risk Assessment: An Investigation of the Interrater Reliability of Professional Judgments Made Using the Risk for Sexual Violence Protocol
  45. Utilization and Implications of the Static-99 in Practice
  46. Assessment and management of risk for intimate partner violence by police officers using the Spousal Assault Risk Assessment Guide.
  47. Legal Uses and Assessment of Psychopathy
  48. Formulation of Violence Risk Using Evidence‐Based Assessments: The Structured Professional Judgment Approach
  49. From the Outgoing Editor
  50. Forensic Case Formulation
  51. Evaluation of a Violence Risk (Threat) Assessment Training Program for Police and Other Criminal Justice Professionals
  52. From the Editor
  53. The development and validation of the guidelines for stalking assessment and management
  54. The relationship between attachment, personality and antisocial tendencies in a prison sample: A pilot study
  55. How Do Police Respond to Stalking? An Examination of the Risk Management Strategies and Tactics Used in a Specialized Anti-Stalking Law Enforcement Unit
  56. Offence Paralleling Behaviour
  57. From the Editor
  58. The Dark Side of Peer Review
  59. From the Editorial Staff
  60. Short-Term Stability of Psychopathic Traits in Adolescent Offenders
  61. Psychopathy and deception detection using indirect measures
  62. Psychopathy and stalking.
  63. Psychosis as a risk factor for violence to others: A meta-analysis.
  64. Brief Communication: Psychopathy and Recognition of Facial Expressions of Emotion
  65. Risk Assessment of Public Figure Stalkers
  66. Authors' reply
  67. Psychopathy and verbal indicators of deception in offenders
  68. Authors' reply
  69. Psychopathy and nonverbal indicators of deception in offenders.
  70. Precision of actuarial risk assessment instruments
  71. A Comparison of General Adult and Forensic Patients with Schizophrenia Living in the Community
  72. A Multisite Study of Community Treatment Programs for Mentally Ill Offenders With Major Mental Disorders
  73. Our Final Editorial
  74. Searching for the pan-cultural core of psychopathic personality disorder
  75. Assessing psychopathy in the UK: concerns about cross-cultural generalisability
  76. Reconstructing Psychopathy: Clarifying the Significance of Antisocial and Socially Deviant Behavior in the Diagnosis of Psychopathic Personality Disorder
  77. Zina Lee, M.A., Gina M. Vincent, Ph.D., Stephen D. Hart, Ph.D., and Raymond R. Corrado, Ph.D. The Validity of the Antisocial Process Screening Device as a Self-Report Measure of Psychopathy in Adolescent Offenders.Behavioral Sciences & the Law, 200...
  78. Cross-National Differences in the Assessment of Psychopathy: Do They Reflect Variations in Raters' Perceptions of Symptoms?
  79. Predictive validity of the Psychopathy Checklist: Youth Version for general and violent recidivism
  80. Actuarial Risk Assessment: Commentary on Berlin et al
  81. Evaluation of a Model of Violence Risk Assessment Among Forensic Psychiatric Patients
  82. The Promise and the Peril of Sex Offender Risk Assessment
  83. The validity of the Antisocial Process Screening Device as a self-report measure of psychopathy in adolescent offenders
  84. Risk Assessment of Stalkers
  85. The Relative Utility of Fixed and Variable Risk Factors in Discriminating Sexual Recidivists and Nonrecidivists
  86. The Inaugural Issue of theInternational Journal of Forensic Mental Health
  87. Introduction
  88. Commentary on Seagrave and Grisso: Impressions of the state of the art.
  89. 8. The Assessment and Treatment of Offenders and Inmates: General Considerations
  90. Validity of the Personality Assessment Inventory for Forensic Assessments
  91. Comparative Examination of the Prevalence of Mental Disorders Among Jailed Inmates in Canada and the United States
  92. Use of the Personality Assessment Inventory to assess psychopathy in offender populations.
  93. Assessing emotional intelligence: reliability and validity of the Bar-On Emotional Quotient Inventory (EQ-i) in university students
  94. Diagnosing mental disorders in offenders: conceptual and methodological issues
  95. The Spousal Assault Risk Assessment (SARA) Guide: Reliability and validity in adult male offenders.
  96. Evaluating the Screening Version of the Hare Psychopathy Checklist—Revised (PCL:SV): An item response theory analysis.
  97. Violence risk communication: Implications for research, policy, and practice
  98. Psychology and Law
  99. Inpatient and Postdischarge Aggression in Mentally Disordered Offenders
  100. Getting reacquainted with an old friend.
  101. The role of psychopathy in assessing risk for violence: Conceptual and methodological issues
  102. Psychopathy and Risk for Violence
  103. The Impact of Canadian Criminal Code Changes on Remands and Assessments of Fitness to Stand Trial and Criminal Responsibility in British Columbia
  104. Wife Assault Treatment and Criminal Recidivism: An 11-Year Follow-Up
  105. Psychopathy and risk assessment
  106. An Examination of the Relationship of Homelessness to Mental Disorder, Criminal Behaviour, and Health Care in a Pretrial Jail Population
  107. The assessment of psychopathy in male and female noncriminals: Reliability and validity
  108. Conceptualizing and assessing competency to stand trial: Implications and applications of the MacArthur Treatment Competence Model.
  109. Psychopathy and antisocial personality disorder
  110. DSM—IV antisocial personality disorder field trial.
  111. Prevalence of WAIS-R prototypal groups in neuropsychiatric participants
  112. The Psychology of Criminal Conduct
  113. Psychopathy and Substance Use
  114. Psychopathy and The Big 5: Correlations Between Observers' Ratings of Normal and Pathological Personality
  115. The Referral Decision Scale: A validation study.
  116. The Prevalence of Personality Disorder Among Wife Assaulters
  117. A note on portraying the accuracy of violence predictions.
  118. Evidence for Long-Term, Specific Effects of Childhood Abuse and Neglect on Criminal Behavior in Men
  119. Risk markers for family violence in a federally incarcerated population
  120. The MCMI-II and Psychopathy
  121. Psychopathy and the DSM-IV criteria for antisocial personality disorder.
  122. Performance of criminal psychopaths on selected neuropsychological tests.
  123. Assessment of psychopathy in male young offenders.
  124. The revised Psychopathy Checklist: Reliability and factor structure.
  125. Discriminant validity of the Psychopathy Checklist in a forensic psychiatric population.
  126. The Psychopath as Prototype for Pathological Lying and Deception
  127. Performance of male psychopaths following conditional release from prison.
  128. Standards, Expectations, and Interpersonal Influence
  129. Psychopathy, Culpability, and Commitment
  130. Managing Stalkers: Coordinating Treatment and Supervision
  131. Motivating the Unmotivated: Psychopathy, Treatment, and Change
  132. Personality of the psychopath.
  133. Risk Assessment