Description: This book presents an interdisciplinary approach to definition of torture by bringing together behavioral science and international law perspectives on torture. It is a collaborative effort by a group of prominent scholars of behavioral sciences, international law, human rights, and public health with internationally recognized expertise and authority in their field. It represents a first ever attempt to explore the scientific basis of legal understanding of torture and inform international law on various definitional issues by proposing a sound theory- and empirical-evidence-based psychological formulation of torture. Drawing on scientific evidence from the editor's 30 years of systematic research on torture, it proposes a learning theory formulation of torture based on the concept of helplessness under the control of others and offers an assessment methodology that can reduce the element of subjectivity in legal judgments in individual cases. It also demonstrates how this formulation can help understand the nature and severity of ill-treatments in different contexts, such as domestic violence and adverse conditions of penal confinement. Through a learning theory analysis of "enhanced interrogation techniques," it demonstrates not only why these techniques constitute torture but also how they help us understand the contextual defining characteristic of torture in general. The proposed formulation implies a broader concept of torture than previously understood, provides scientific and moral justification for the evolving trends in international law towards a broader coverage of ill-treatments in contexts beyond official custody and points to new directions of expansion of the concept. With a focus on the concepts of shame and humiliation and their evolutionary origin, the book explains why inhuman or degrading treatments can cause as much pain or suffering as physical torture. Although treatment issues are not covered, the book sheds light on potentially effective treatment approaches by offering important insights into psychology of torture.
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EAN: 9780199374625
UPC: 9780199374625
ISBN: 9780199374625
MPN: N/A
Book Title: Torture and Its Definition in International Law: A
Item Length: 23.1 cm
Subject Area: International Law, Economic Sociology, Sexual Abuse, Clinical Psychology, Physical Education
Item Height: 234 mm
Item Width: 168 mm
Author: Metin Basoglu
Publication Name: Torture and Its Definition in International Law: an Interdisciplinary Approach
Format: Paperback
Language: English
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Subject: Medicine, Social Sciences, Government
Publication Year: 2017
Type: Textbook
Item Weight: 792 g
Number of Pages: 576 Pages