Learning Disabilities and Serious Crime – Sex Offences

Abstract

This review paper follows on from two previous reviews of the literature with regard to, firstly, learning disability and murder and, secondly, learning disability and arson. This paper, in turn, examines the relationship, if any, between learning disability and sexual offence. The approach taken in all these papers involves the concept of Disruptive Behaviour Disorder as being the group of behaviour and personality disorders most involved in the aetiology of these criminal and anti-social behaviours. Disruptive behaviour disorders (Read 2007) comprise: Oppositional Defiant Disorder Conduct Disorder Anti-social Personality Disorder Intermittent Explosive Disorder (DSM IVR 2001) The common characteristics of these disorders comprise aggression, irritability, over-activity, high arousal, and repetitive behaviour.

How to Cite

Read, F. & Read, E., (2009) “Learning Disabilities and Serious Crime – Sex Offences”, Mental Health and Learning Disabilities Research and Practice 6(1). doi: https://doi.org/10.5920/mhldrp.2009.6137

Download

Download PDF

543

Views

1916

Downloads

Share

Authors

Fiona Read
Elspeth Read

Download

Issue

Dates

Licence

Identifiers

Peer Review

This article has been peer reviewed.

File Checksums (MD5)

  • PDF: 77a1a9a89650137bad24f046ebb0d614