The Forensic Update Podcast
In this episode of the Forensic Update Podcast, we're joined by Jane Ireland, Professor of Forensic Psychology at Liverpool John Moores University, Violence Treatment Lead at Ashworth High Secure Hospital, and Academic Lead for the Ashworth Research Centre. With more than three decades of experience spanning forensic practice, research, academia and violence treatment, Jane reflects on how forensic psychology has evolved and where the profession may be heading next. The conversation explores: * How forensic psychology has changed over the past 30 years * The shift from formulation to checklist-driven risk assessment — and back again * Why formulation remains central to understanding offending behaviour * Cognition, aggression and the mechanisms that drive violence * Hostile attribution biases, normative beliefs and decision-making * Neurodiversity, acquired brain injury and violence risk * Diagnosis, personality disorder and treatment planning * Clinical psychopathy and why it still matters * Treatment sequencing and tailoring interventions to individual needs * The importance of maintaining the art of conversation in forensic practice Jane also shares her thoughts on the future of forensic psychology, warning against over-reliance on assessment alone and advocating for a stronger focus on treatment, clinical formulation, and understanding the individual behind the behaviour. This is a fascinating conversation for practitioners, researchers, trainees and anyone interested in how forensic psychology can continue to evolve while staying grounded in sound clinical practice.
6 episodes
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