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Chapter 18: Bio-Psycho-Social Model

Bio-Psycho-Social Model

Bio-Psycho-Social Model: Emphasizes biological tendencies along with psychological and environmental factors; all play equally important role in making a person criminal.

Posits that biological, psychological, and social factors all play a significant role in human functioning, including mental processes.

Used in criminal psychology, medicine, sociology, psychiatry, and clinical psychology.

Views mind and body as interlinked systems.

Twin and adoption studies show a genetic basis for antisocial, aggressive, and violent behavior (Mednick et al., 1984).

Youth with early-onset behavioral problems: genetic factors strongly influence temperamental predisposition, especially oppositional temperament.

Later-onset antisocial behavior in childhood/adolescence: genetic factors contribute less; peer influences and parenting lapses play a larger role.

Bio-psycho-social factors are mingled and interdependent.

Research supports an integrated view rather than sole responsibility of genetics/biology or environment.

Optimistic model: believes in treatment, not punishment; suggests criminals should be treated in mental hospitals instead of jails.

Jails are “factories of criminals”: mixing new criminals with hardened offenders increases habitual criminal behavior and crime rate.

Limits: treating all offenders in mental hospitals could lead to abuse and inhumane treatment; removing punishment may encourage crime.

Proportionate punishment proposed as a balanced approach:

Day jails applied in western countries for minor offenses; allows society-specific adaptation.

Example: New York City reduced recorded crime while decreasing prison use (20,000 to 8,000 annually from 1990s to 2000s).

Basic Concepts

Basic Concepts:

Key Concepts in Bio-Psycho-Social Model

Integrated Factors
Biological, psychological, social interplay
Genetic Basis
Twin/adoption studies support predisposition
Onset Differences
Early vs. later antisocial behavior
Optimism
Treatment over punishment
Limits & Balance
Proportionate punishment, day jails
Applications
Used in criminal psychology, medicine

Summary of Important Points

Aspect Description
Model Overview Biological, psychological, social factors equally important
Genetic Evidence Twin/adoption studies show basis for antisocial behavior
Onset Variations Early-onset more genetic; later-onset more environmental
Approach Treatment in mental hospitals; jails as criminal factories
Limits Risk of abuse; need for proportionate punishment
Basic Concepts Genetic predisposition, parenting, social variables, optimism
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