LSE creators

Number of items: 50.
Article
  • Peay, Jill, Player, Elaine (2021). Not a stain on your character?”: the finality of acquittals and the search for just outcomes. Criminal Law Review, 2021(11), 921 - 944. picture_as_pdf
  • Beech, V., Marshall, C. M., Exworthy, T., Peay, Jill, Blackwood, N. J. (2019). Forty-five revolutions per minute: a qualitative study of Hybrid Order use in forensic psychiatric practice. Journal of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychology, 30(3), 429-447. https://doi.org/10.1080/14789949.2019.1588910
  • Peay, Jill, Player, Elaine (2018). Pleading guilty: why vulnerability matters. Modern Law Review, 81(6), 929 – 957. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2230.12374
  • Brown, Penelope, Stahl, Daniel, Appiah-Kusi, Elizabeth, Brewer, Rebecca, Watts, Michael, Peay, Jill, Blackwood, Nigel (2018). Fitness to plead: development and validation of a standardised assessment instrument. PLOS ONE, 13(4). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0194332
  • Peay, Jill (2016). Responsibility, culpability and the sentencing of mentally disordered offenders: objectives in conflict. Criminal Law Review, (3), 152-164.
  • Peay, Jill (2015). Mental incapacity and criminal liability: redrawing the fault lines? International Journal of Law and Psychiatry, 40, 25-35. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijlp.2015.04.007
  • Peay, Jill (2012). Insanity and automatism: questions from and about the Law Commission's scoping paper. Criminal Law Review, (12), 927-945.
  • Peay, Jill (2011). Mental disorder and crime: some unresolved questions. Scottish Journal of Criminal Justice Studies, 17, 5-17.
  • Peay, Jill (2011). Personality disorder and the law: some awkward questions. Philosophy, Psychiatry and Psychology, 18(3), 231-244. https://doi.org/10.1353/ppp.2011.0035
  • Peay, Jill (2011). Recession, crime and mental health. Papers From the British Criminology Conference, 11, 3-19.
  • Peay, Jill (2007). Insanity and responsibility: does M’Naghten do justice to the manifestly mad? Death and Life Studies,
  • Peay, Jill (2005). Decision-making in mental health law: can past experience predict future practice? Journal of Mental Health Law, 12, 41-56.
  • Peay, Jill (2005). Review: Involuntary detention and therapeutic jurisprudence: international perspectives on civil commitment. Medical Law Review, 13(1), 124-128. https://doi.org/10.1093/medlaw/fwi008
  • Peay, Jill (2004). Book review: Gelsthorpe and Padfield: exercising discretion: decision-making in the criminal justice system and beyond. Modern Law Review, 67(3), 524-527. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2230.2004.498_1.x
  • Peay, Jill (2003). Working with concepts of "dangerousness" in the context of mental health law. Criminal Justice Matters, 51(1), 18-19. https://doi.org/10.1080/09627250308553514
  • Roberts, Caroline, Peay, Jill, Eastman, Nigel (2002). Mental health professionals' attitudes towards legal compulsion in England and Wales: report of a national survey. International Journal of Forensic Mental Health, 1(1), 71-82.
  • Peay, Jill (2002). 'Mental health professionals' attitudes towards legal compulsion: report of a national survey. International Journal of Forensic Mental Health, 1, 69-80.
  • Peay, Jill, Roberts, Caroline, Eastman, Nigel (2001). Legal knowledge of mental health professionals: report of a national survey. Journal of Mental Health Law, 44-55.
  • Peay, Jill (2000). Reform of the Mental Health Act 1983: squandering an opportunity? Journal of Mental Health Law, (3), 5-15.
  • Peay, Jill (2000). Surviving psychiatry in an era of 'popular punitiveness'. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 101(399), 72-76. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0902-4441.2000.007s020[dash]17.x
  • Book
  • Newburn, Tim, Peay, Jill (Eds.) (2012). Policing: politics, culture and control. Hart Publishing.
  • Peay, Jill (2010). Mental health and crime. Routledge.
  • Peay, Jill (Ed.) (2005). Seminal issues in mental health law. Ashgate Dartmouth.
  • Peay, Jill (2003). Decisions and dilemmas: working with mental health law. Hart Publishing.
  • Eastman, Nigel, Peay, Jill (Eds.) (1999). Law without enforcement: integrating mental health and justice. Hart Publishing.
  • Peay, Jill (Ed.) (1998). Criminal justice and the mentally disordered. Ashgate Dartmouth.
  • Peay, Jill (Ed.) (1996). Inquiries after homicide. Duckworth (Firm).
  • Chapter
  • Peay, Jill (2023). Mental illness and criminal law irreconcilable bedfellows? In Kelly, Brendan D., Donnelly, Mary (Eds.), Routledge Handbook of Mental Health Law (pp. 255 - 271). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003226413-18
  • Peay, Jill (2021). Anticipating harm in the context of mental disorder. Looking at Italy from England and Wales. In Bevilacqua, Marco, Notaro, Laura, Profeta, Giulio, Ricci, Laura, Savarino, Alice (Eds.), Malattia psichiatrica e pericolosità sociale: Tra sistema penale e servizi sanitari (pp. 37 - 52). Giappichelli.
  • Peay, Jill (2017). Mental health, mental disabilities and crime. In Liebling, A., Maruna, S., McAra, L. (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Criminology . Oxford, UK.
  • Peay, Jill (2016). An awkward fit: offenders with mental disabilities in a system of criminal justice. In Bosworth, M., Hoyle, C., Zedner, L. (Eds.), Changing Contours of Criminal Justice: Research, Politics and Policy . Oxford University Press.
  • Peay, Jill, Player, Elaine (2016). The ethics of criminalisation: intentions and consequences. In Jackson, Jonathan, Jacobs, Jonathan (Eds.), Routledge Handbook of Criminal Justice Ethics . Routledge.
  • Amos, Tim, Gordon, Harvey, Gunn, John, Peay, Jill, Walker, Julian (2014). The majority of crime: theft, motoring and criminal damage (including arson). In Gunn, John, Taylor, Pamela (Eds.), Forensic Psychiatry: Clinical Legal and Ethical Issues (pp. 266-282). CRC Press.
  • Peay, Jill (2013). Mental disorder and imprisonment: understanding an intractable problem? In Dockley, Anita, Loader, Ian (Eds.), The Penal Landscape: the Howard League Guide to Criminal Justice in England and Wales (pp. 133-149). Routledge.
  • Peay, Jill (2012). Mentally disordered offenders, mental health and crime. In Maguire, Mike, Morgan, Rod, Reiner, Robert (Eds.), Oxford Handbook of Criminology (pp. 496-528). Oxford University Press.
  • Peay, Jill (2010). Civil admission following a finding of unfitness to plead. In McSherry, Bernadette, Weller, Penelope (Eds.), Rethinking Rights-Based Mental Health Laws (pp. 231-254). Hart Publishing.
  • Peay, Jill (2010). Suicide and homicide in psychiatric hospitals: caring for victims? In Newburn, Tim, Downes, David, Hobbs, Richard (Eds.), The Eternal Recurrence of Crime and Control: Essays in Honour of Paul Rock (pp. 211-228). Oxford University Press.
  • Peay, Jill (2007). Detain-restrain-control: sliding scale or slippery slope? In Downes, D., Rock, P., Chinkin, Christine, Gearty, Conor (Eds.), Crime, Social Control and Human Rights From Moral Panics to States of Denial: Essays in Honour of Stanley Cohen . Willan Publishing.
  • Peay, Jill (2005). Introduction. In Peay, Jill (Ed.), Seminal Issues in Mental Health Law (pp. xvi-xlvi). Ashgate Dartmouth.
  • Peay, Jill (2003). Law and stigma – present, future and futuristic solutions. In Crisp, Arthur H (Ed.), Every Family in the Land: Understanding Prejudice and Discrimination Against People With Mental Illness (pp. 367-372). Royal Society of Medicine Press (Great Britain).
  • Peay, Jill, Eastman, Nigel (1999). Afterword: integrating mental health and justice. In Peay, Jill, Eastman, Nigel (Eds.), Law Without Enforcement: Integrating Mental Health and Justice (pp. 197-218). Hart Publishing.
  • Peay, Jill, Eastman, Nigel (1999). Law without enforcement: theory and practice. In Peay, Jill, Eastman, Nigel (Eds.), Law Without Enforcement: Integrating Mental Health and Justice (pp. 1-38). Hart Publishing.
  • Peay, Jill (1999). Thinking horses not zebras. In Webb, David C., Harrison, Rupert (Eds.), Mentally Disordered Offenders: Managing People Nobody Owns (pp. 141-155). Routledge.
  • Conference or Workshop Item
  • Peay, Jill (2004-11-12) Decision-making in mental health law: can past experience predict future practice? [Paper]. 2nd Mental Health Law Conference for the North 2004, Newcastle, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Peay, Jill (2004-06-06 - 2004-06-09) Putting US mental health courts into the European context [Paper]. 4th Annual Conference of the International Association of Forensic Mental Health Services, Stockholm, Sweden, SWE.
  • Peay, Jill (2004-05-27) Revisiting seminal issues in mental health law: conflict, context and choice [Paper]. Modern Law Review Seminar on New Directions in Mental Health and Mental Incapacity: Law, Policy and Practice, Liverpool, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Working paper
  • Peay, Jill (2019). Legal malingering: a vortex of uncertainty. (LSE Law Working Papers 10/2019). LSE Law. picture_as_pdf
  • Peay, Jill (2015). Sentencing mentally disordered offenders: conflicting objectives, perilous decisions and cognitive insights. (LSE Law, Society and Economy Working Paper Series). London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2549653
  • Peay, Jill (2014). Imprisoning the mentally disordered: a manifest injustice? (Law Society and Economy Working Paper Series). London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2378445
  • Peay, Jill (2012). Fitness to plead and core competencies: problems and possibilities. (Law working papers WPS 02-2012). Department of Law, London School of Economics and Political Science.