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Remorse and Reparation

Edited by Murray Cox

Number 7 in the Forensic Focus series

Paperback: £25.00 / $42.95

1998, 234mm x 156mm / 9.25in x 6in, 288pp
ISBN: 978-1-85302-452-8, BIC 2: JMK MMF

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Hardback: £49.99 / $95.00

1998, 234mm x 156mm / 9.25in x 6in, 288pp
ISBN: 978-1-85302-451-1, BIC 2: JMK MMF

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`Remorse, or rather the lack of it, frequently features in banner headlines. But there is little systematic study of this important interdisciplinary topic whose relevance has extensive social ramifications. The complex relationship between remorse, shame guilt and attempts at reparation, are discussed in this authoritative work. This volume is the first comprehensive attempt to bring together both forensic clinicians and those working within the criminal justice system.'

- New Life

`Familiar though they are in literature, religion and philosophy, the phenomena of remorse and reparation are rarely explored in either the theory or practice of forensic psychotherapy. This book begins to address those omissions, dealing with clinical and legal questions and ranging widely over political, philosophical, sociological and artistic perspectives...Remorse and Reparation is very much the expression of Murray Cox's particular, and unique, talent. He would have been proud of this, his last book, even though he did not live long enough to supervise its publication. Murray has brought together authors from different disciplines to convey a myriad of views. Although occasionally contradictory, the impacts of original insights presented from several different perspectives can be stunning. This book will be a valuable addition to the literature of any forensic institution.'

- British Journal of Psychiatry

`This is a book all magistrates, probation officers and QPMs should read. It consists of 15 short and mostly readable essays, looking at a little-considered aspect of human experience from medical, legal, sociological and philosophical points of view. The case studies quoted are very much to the point ... Two essays particularly impressed me. David Tidmarsh, now of the Parole Board, was formerly on the staff of Broadmoor Hospital. He draws attention to the lack of reference to remorse in the Board's remit, which is concerned only with risk ... John Harding of the Inner London Probation Service quotes examples, including two well-known ones from Barlinnie, where moral reformation has occurred.'

- Newsletter of Quakers in Criminal Justice

Remorse, or rather the lack of it, frequently features in banner headlines. But there is little systematic study of this important inter-disciplinary topic whose relevance has extensive social ramifications. Should a show of remorse by an offender be taken into account in sentencing? Is there a correlation between the experience of remorse and a diminished likelihood of re-offending? And is there a correlation between the experience and the expression of remorse? Such questions, and the complex relationship between remorse, shame, guilt and attempts at reparation, are discussed in this authoritative work.

This volume is the first comprehensive attempt to bring together both forensic clinicians and those working within the criminal justice system. There is also a series of chapters by those writing from the adjacent complementary disciplines of moral philosophy, classics, Shakespeare studies, sociology and anthropology.

By the same author


Shakespeare Comes to Broadmoor

'The Actors are Come Hither' - The Performance of Tragedy in a Secure Psychiatric Hospital

Edited by Murray Cox


Coding the Therapeutic Process

Emblems of Encounter: A Manual for Counsellors and Therapists

Murray Cox


Mutative Metaphors in Psychotherapy

The Aeolian Mode

Murray Cox and Alice Theilgaard


Shakespeare as Prompter

The Amending Imagination and the Therapeutic Process

Murray Cox and Alice Theilgaard


Structuring the Therapeutic Process

Compromise with Chaos: The Therapist's Response to the Individual and the Group

Murray Cox


The Group as Poetic Play-Ground

From Metaphor to Metamorphosis: The 1990 S H Foulkes Annual Lecture

Murray Cox

Cover of Forensic Psychotherapy

Forensic Psychotherapy

Crime, Psychodynamics and the Offender Patient

Christopher Cordess and Murray Cox