What is Forensic Psychology?

Forensic Psychology Career Advice

By Allen Bell, published Nov 28, 2006
Published Content: 154  Total Views: 96,209  Favorited By: 19 CPs
Embed:  
Rating: 3.0 of 5
Forensic psychology is one of the fastest growing areas of psychology. This is backed by an increase in the practice of clinical psychology in our legal system and the increasing intent by undergraduate and graduate students. Many students though are mislead by sensationalistic media portrayals that may not be accurate or offer realistic employment opportunities.

A forensic psychologist is any psychologist who offers an expert psychological opinion in a way that impacts one of the adversarial arenas, typically the courts. Forensic psychologist may assist a court or other fact finder in arriving at a just or correct decision. An example would be the forensic psychologist might assist in a wide variety of civil matters. Civil matters include but are not limited to lawsuits or insurance claims where emotional suffering is a part of the claim, determination of competency of an aged or ill person to make decisions whether a death was an accident or a "disguised suicide" in an insurance claim case, or in a wide variety of other areas.

Careers in Forensic Psychology
Forensic psychologist can be employed in a variety of settings including jails, prisons, state hospitals, federal and local law enforcement, community mental health centers, juvenile detition centers, private practice, or colleges and universities.
One of the biggest draws for some students to become interested in forensic psychology is their interest in "criminal profiling". The reality is that most enforcement agencies do not use criminal profiling procedures and those that do use similar procedures are more likely to employ law enforcement personnel than they are to employ a forensic psychologist. Criminal profiling is much more of a law enforcement technique than it is a scientific process.

What is Forensic Psychology?

Forensic psychology is one of the fastest growing areas of psychology

Credit: www.freephotos.com

Copyright: www.freephotos.com

Takeaways
  • Forensic psychologist are employed in a wide field from prisons to universities.
  • Forensic psychologist may assist a court or other fact finder in arriving at a just or correct decis
  • Criminal profiling is much more of a law enforcement technique than it is a scientific process
Did You Know?
A forensic psychologist is any psychologist who offers an expert psychological opinion in a way that impacts one of the adversarial arenas, typically the courts.
Resources
Comments
Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)

Submit your own content on this or any topic. Get started »
Advertisment