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Legal medicine in history / edited by Michael Clark and Catherine Crawford.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Cambridge studies in the history of medicinePublisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1994Description: 1 online resource (xi, 364 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780511599668 (ebook)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version: : No titleDDC classification:
  • 614/.1/09 20
LOC classification:
  • RA1021 .L44 1994
Online resources:
Contents:
Forensic medicine in early colonial Maryland, 1633-83 / Helen Brock and Catherine Crawford--The scope of legal medicine in Lancashire and Cheshire, 1660-1760 / David Harley--Suspicious infant deaths: the statute of 1624 and medical evidence at coroners' inquests / Mark Jackson--Legalizing medicine: early modern legal systems and the growth of medico-legal knowledge / Catherine Crawford--Infanticide trials and forensic medicine: Wurttemberg, 1757-93 / Mary Nagel Wessling--Training medical policemen: forensic medicine and public health in nineteenth-century Scotland / Brenda White.
(cont.) "I answer as a physician": opinion as fact in pre-McNaughtan insanity trials / Joel Peter Eigen--Understanding the terrorist: anarchism, medicine and politics in fin-de-siecle France / Ruth Harris--Malingerers, the "weak-minded" criminal and the "moral imbecile": how the English prison medical officer became an expert in mental deficiency, 1880-1930 / Stephen Watson--The magistrate of the poor? Coroners and deaths in custody in nineteenth-century England / Joe Sim and Tony Ward--Coroners, corruption and the politics of death: forensic pathology in the United States / Julie Johnson--Unbuilt Bloomsbury: medico-legal institutes and forensic science laboratories in England between the wars / Norman Ambage and Michael Clark--Rex v. Bourne and the medicalization of abortion / Barbara Brookes and Paul Roth.
Summary: This collection of essays presents fresh interpretations of the growth of medico-legal ideas, institutions and practices in Britain, Europe and America over the past four hundred years. Based on a wealth of new research, it brings the historical study of legal medicine firmly into the realm of social history. Case studies of infanticide, abortion, coroners' inquests and criminal insanity show that legal medicine has often been the focus of social change and political controversy. The contributors also emphasise the formative influence of legal systems on medico-legal knowledge and practice. Legal Medicine in History enlarges our understanding of the public role of medicine in modern western societies, while opening up new perspectives on social, cultural and political history.
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Forensic medicine in early colonial Maryland, 1633-83 / Helen Brock and Catherine Crawford--The scope of legal medicine in Lancashire and Cheshire, 1660-1760 / David Harley--Suspicious infant deaths: the statute of 1624 and medical evidence at coroners' inquests / Mark Jackson--Legalizing medicine: early modern legal systems and the growth of medico-legal knowledge / Catherine Crawford--Infanticide trials and forensic medicine: Wurttemberg, 1757-93 / Mary Nagel Wessling--Training medical policemen: forensic medicine and public health in nineteenth-century Scotland / Brenda White.

(cont.) "I answer as a physician": opinion as fact in pre-McNaughtan insanity trials / Joel Peter Eigen--Understanding the terrorist: anarchism, medicine and politics in fin-de-siecle France / Ruth Harris--Malingerers, the "weak-minded" criminal and the "moral imbecile": how the English prison medical officer became an expert in mental deficiency, 1880-1930 / Stephen Watson--The magistrate of the poor? Coroners and deaths in custody in nineteenth-century England / Joe Sim and Tony Ward--Coroners, corruption and the politics of death: forensic pathology in the United States / Julie Johnson--Unbuilt Bloomsbury: medico-legal institutes and forensic science laboratories in England between the wars / Norman Ambage and Michael Clark--Rex v. Bourne and the medicalization of abortion / Barbara Brookes and Paul Roth.

This collection of essays presents fresh interpretations of the growth of medico-legal ideas, institutions and practices in Britain, Europe and America over the past four hundred years. Based on a wealth of new research, it brings the historical study of legal medicine firmly into the realm of social history. Case studies of infanticide, abortion, coroners' inquests and criminal insanity show that legal medicine has often been the focus of social change and political controversy. The contributors also emphasise the formative influence of legal systems on medico-legal knowledge and practice. Legal Medicine in History enlarges our understanding of the public role of medicine in modern western societies, while opening up new perspectives on social, cultural and political history.

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