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“How Neuroscience Can Improve the Sentencing of Defendants with Autism Spectrum Disorder”

The title of this post is the title of this book chapter now available via SSRN authored by Colleen Berryessa and Carolina Caliman. Here is its abstract:

Defendants with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) face a myriad of difficulties at every stage of the legal process-which not only can negatively affect their experiences in court but also the fairness, efficacy, and legitimacy of their outcomes at sentencing.  This chapter explores how advances in neuroscience can help positively impact the sentencing and aftercare of defendants with ASD in the United States, specifically focusing on the role of neuroscience in shaping more appropriate and prosocial legal decision-making during the sentencing proceedings of diagnosed defendants.

First, the chapter will discuss how neuroscience may aid legal decision-makers to better contextualize an ASD diagnosis and its neurodiversity during sentencing proceedings.  Then, it will explore how neuroscience can be used to cultivate better models of care and service innovations when developing and implementing sentencing accommodations for defendants with ASD.  Finally, the chapter will describe how neuroscience is being used to increase the education, awareness, and training of legal decision-makers, including judges, attorneys, and court personnel, on ASD and its forensic relevance to sentencing and other legal processes.