info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Violence risk assessment practices in Spain
Fecha
2016Registro en:
Arbach, Karin; Andrés Pueyo, Antonio; Violence risk assessment practices in Spain; Oxford University Press; 2016; 200-240
9780199386291
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Arbach, Karin
Andrés Pueyo, Antonio
Resumen
While practitioners are routinely faced with the task of assessing the risk of violence, the use of structured methods is neither mandatory nor widespread among mental health, correctional, and law enforcement professionals in Spain. That said, the dichotomous construct of dangerousness that had once been widely accepted by both practitioners and the judiciary has largely been replaced over the course of the 21st century by the continuous construct of risk (Andrés-Pueyo & Redondo-Illescas, 2007). This shift can mainly be attributed to the recognition that unstructured judgments of dangerousness produce poor levels of both predictive validity as well as inter-rater reliability (for a thorough discussion see Andrés-Pueyo & Arbach-Lucioni, 2014). The aim of the present chapter is to consider the history of this conceptual shift, including a discussion of risk assessment tools developed in Spain as well as the identification of future directions for research and practice in the country.