Defence of insanity & diminished responsibility in our system of criminal justice / Nor Zihan M. Zain

The term "insanity" is, usually regarded by lawyers as a medical; term and by doctors as a legal term. In fact there is no legal or medical definition of insanity, but in medical parlance, it has a fairly clear and definite meaning, namely, that the patient is.suffering from a major mental...

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Main Author: M. Zain, Nor Zihan
Format: Student Project
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Law 1986
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/27914/
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author M. Zain, Nor Zihan
author_facet M. Zain, Nor Zihan
author_sort M. Zain, Nor Zihan
building UiTM Institutional Repository
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description The term "insanity" is, usually regarded by lawyers as a medical; term and by doctors as a legal term. In fact there is no legal or medical definition of insanity, but in medical parlance, it has a fairly clear and definite meaning, namely, that the patient is.suffering from a major mental disease (usually a psychosis). Over the years, judges and academic writers have assumed that when an accused person pleads the defence of insanity,he pleads what Glanville Williams has aptly described as "M'Naghten Madness".In 1843 M'Naghten, a Scotsman, who was suffering from a delusion that he was being persecuted killed Sir Robert Peel's secretary on the mistaken belief that the latter was Sir Robert. On a plea of insanity, M'Naghten was acquitted of the charge of murder and sent to a mental asylum
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spelling uitm-279142024-11-07T08:21:40Z https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/27914/ Defence of insanity & diminished responsibility in our system of criminal justice / Nor Zihan M. Zain M. Zain, Nor Zihan K Law in general. Comparative and uniform law. Jurisprudence The term "insanity" is, usually regarded by lawyers as a medical; term and by doctors as a legal term. In fact there is no legal or medical definition of insanity, but in medical parlance, it has a fairly clear and definite meaning, namely, that the patient is.suffering from a major mental disease (usually a psychosis). Over the years, judges and academic writers have assumed that when an accused person pleads the defence of insanity,he pleads what Glanville Williams has aptly described as "M'Naghten Madness".In 1843 M'Naghten, a Scotsman, who was suffering from a delusion that he was being persecuted killed Sir Robert Peel's secretary on the mistaken belief that the latter was Sir Robert. On a plea of insanity, M'Naghten was acquitted of the charge of murder and sent to a mental asylum Faculty of Law 1986 Student Project NonPeerReviewed text en https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/27914/2/27914.pdf M. Zain, Nor Zihan (1986) Defence of insanity & diminished responsibility in our system of criminal justice / Nor Zihan M. Zain. (1986) [Student Project] <http://terminalib.uitm.edu.my/27914.pdf> (Unpublished)
spellingShingle K Law in general. Comparative and uniform law. Jurisprudence
M. Zain, Nor Zihan
Defence of insanity & diminished responsibility in our system of criminal justice / Nor Zihan M. Zain
title Defence of insanity & diminished responsibility in our system of criminal justice / Nor Zihan M. Zain
title_full Defence of insanity & diminished responsibility in our system of criminal justice / Nor Zihan M. Zain
title_fullStr Defence of insanity & diminished responsibility in our system of criminal justice / Nor Zihan M. Zain
title_full_unstemmed Defence of insanity & diminished responsibility in our system of criminal justice / Nor Zihan M. Zain
title_short Defence of insanity & diminished responsibility in our system of criminal justice / Nor Zihan M. Zain
title_sort defence of insanity & diminished responsibility in our system of criminal justice / nor zihan m. zain
topic K Law in general. Comparative and uniform law. Jurisprudence
url https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/27914/