Homicide is routinely discussed from statistical, cultural or sociological perspectives, with the main emphasis given to the frequency of people being killed. This book-rooted in clinical psychiatry-considers those who do the killing.
Discussions of different diagnoses are used to illustrate how clinical psychiatric conditions have their own special vulnerabilities for violence. Problems of epidemiology, a discussion of the problems of prediction, and the legal system's differing goals are also included. The author, a psychiatric consultant for the District Court of Minneapolis, personally evaluated over 500 people who have committed a homicide.
