About the research project

The fundamental legal doctrine of criminal insanity is found in most legal orders. It concerns a defendant’s lack of capacity for responsible action and defines the justifiable use of punishment. It is a key entrance point for comprehending how law conceives of agency and deviancy, but also a highly controversial legal construct. A major concern is that there is a mismatch between how criminal insanity has been paradigmatically understood in law and how it is today inevitably associated with mental disorders. 

This doctrine has been formulated in terms of folk psychological notions of rational agency but increasingly relies on psychiatric diagnoses and symptoms, with forensic experts as premise providers in criminal proceedings. However, psychiatric constructs were not developed for criminal law and people diagnosed with mental disorders may have vastly varying functional impairments. 

Legal researc has yet to elucidate how this complexity plays out in criminal insanity rules and judgements. There is a pressing need for cross-country empirical and interdisciplinary legal studies that integrate insights from mind sciences to explore this matter. The lack of legal clarity about the relevance of mental disorders raises concerns about the rule of law, unequal treatment, and criminal justice. 

COMPLEX will advance our understanding of law’s associations between criminal responsibility and mental disorders, with a research design that transcends conventional legal research by combining cross-country empirical studies of current legal doctrines with interdisciplinary analysis of how the normative and factual legal premises about mental disorders involved in these doctrines relate to philosophy and mind sciences. The ambition is to provide a new theoretical framework for understanding mental disorders in criminal law. COMPLEX has the potential to challenge current paradigms and have major implications for both science and society.

Principal Investigator

Linda Gröning is a Professor of Law at the University of Bergen. She is recognized as an internationally leading scholar in criminal law, with particular expertise in criminal responsibility and legal insanity. Gröning has extensive experience with interdisciplinary research at the intersection of law, psychiatry, and philosophy, and has led several major research projects. She also serves as the chair of the Norwegian Criminal Law Council (Straffelovrådet).

Video introduction

Watch the opening lecture by PI Linda Gröning: Criminal Responsibility - The Legal Relevance of Mental Disorders

Link to video

People

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Project members
Advisory Board