Duke Law School
Duke Law Journal



LAW AND CONTEMPORARY PROBLEMS






Volume 69 Winter/Spring 2006 Numbers 1 & 2



The Impact of Behavioral Genetics on the Criminal Law

Nita A. Farahany and James E. Coleman, Jr.
Special Editors














Memoriam













Foreword Nita A. Farahany
1






Behavioral Genetics: The Science of Antisocial Behavior Laura A. Baker
Serena Bezdjian
and Adrian Raine
7






Misinformation, Misrepresentation, and Misuse of Human Behavioral Genetics Research Jonathan Kaplan 47






Behavioral Genetics and Crime, in Context Owen D. Jones 81






Considering Convergence: A Policy Dialogue About Behavioral Genetics, Neuroscience, and Law Brent Garland
and Mark S. Frankel
101






Genetics and Responsibility: To Know the Criminal From the Crime Nita A. Farahany
and James E. Coleman, Jr.
115






Addiction, Genetics, and Criminal Responsibility Stephen J. Morse 165






Revisiting the Legal Link Between Genetics and Crime Deborah W. Denno 209






Behavioral Genetics Research and Criminal DNA Databases D.H. Kaye 259






Genetic Predictions of Future Dangerousness: Is There a Blueprint For Violence? Erica Beecher-Monas
and Edgar Garcia-Rill
301






The Scarlet Gene: Behavioral Genetics, Criminal Law, and Racial and Ethnic Stigma Karen Rothenberg
and Alice Wang
343