Peay, Jill

Number of items: 50.
None
  • Peay, Jill (2023). Mental illness and criminal law: irreconcilable bedfellows? In Kelly, B. D. & Donnelly, M. (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, M., Notaro, L., Profeta, G., Ricci, L. & Savarino, A. (Eds.), Malattia psichiatrica e pericolosità sociale: Tra sistema penale e servizi sanitari (pp. 37 - 52). Giappichelli.
  • 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 (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, J. & Jacobs, J. (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, J. & Taylor, P. (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, A. & Loader, I. (Eds.), The Penal Landscape: the Howard League Guide to Criminal Justice in England and Wales (pp. 133-149). Routledge.
  • Newburn, Tim, Peay, Jill (Eds.) (2012). Policing: politics, culture and control. Hart Publishing.
  • Peay, Jill (2012). Mentally disordered offenders, mental health and crime. In Maguire, M., Morgan, R. & Reiner, R. (Eds.), Oxford Handbook of Criminology (pp. 496-528). Oxford University Press.
  • 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). Recession, crime and mental health. Papers From the British Criminology Conference, 11, 3-19.
  • Peay, Jill (2010). Mental health and crime. Routledge.
  • Peay, Jill (2010). Suicide and homicide in psychiatric hospitals: caring for victims? In Newburn, T., Downes, D. & Hobbs, R. (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, C. & Gearty, C. (Eds.), Crime, Social Control and Human Rights From Moral Panics to States of Denial: Essays in Honour of Stanley Cohen . Willan Publishing.
  • 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). Introduction. In Peay, J. (Ed.), Seminal Issues in Mental Health Law (pp. xvi-xlvi). Ashgate Dartmouth.
  • 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 (Ed.) (2005). Seminal issues in mental health law. Ashgate Dartmouth.
  • 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.
  • 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). Decisions and dilemmas: working with mental health law. Hart Publishing.
  • Peay, Jill (2003). Law and stigma – present, future and futuristic solutions. In Crisp, A. 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 (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
  • Peay, Jill, Eastman, Nigel (1999). Afterword: integrating mental health and justice. In Peay, J. & Eastman, N. (Eds.), Law Without Enforcement: Integrating Mental Health and Justice (pp. 197-218). Hart Publishing.
  • Eastman, Nigel, Peay, Jill (Eds.) (1999). Law without enforcement: integrating mental health and justice. Hart Publishing.
  • Peay, Jill, Eastman, Nigel (1999). Law without enforcement: theory and practice. In Peay, J. & Eastman, N. (Eds.), Law Without Enforcement: Integrating Mental Health and Justice (pp. 1-38). Hart Publishing.
  • Peay, Jill (1999). Thinking horses not zebras. In Webb, D. C. & Harrison, R. (Eds.), Mentally Disordered Offenders: Managing People Nobody Owns (pp. 141-155). Routledge.
  • Peay, Jill (Ed.) (1998). Criminal justice and the mentally disordered. Ashgate Dartmouth.
  • Peay, Jill (Ed.) (1996). Inquiries after homicide. Duckworth (Firm).
  • Public
  • 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
  • Peay, Jill (2019). Legal malingering: a vortex of uncertainty. (LSE Law Working Papers 10/2019). LSE Law. picture_as_pdf
  • 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 (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). 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 (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.
  • 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 (2010). Civil admission following a finding of unfitness to plead. In McSherry, B. & Weller, P. (Eds.), Rethinking Rights-Based Mental Health Laws (pp. 231-254). Hart Publishing.