The Comfort of Madness: How Society's Need to Pathologize Violence Undermines Justice and Stigmatizes Mental Illness

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29173/jafn880

Keywords:

violence attribution, psychiatric stigma, societal denial, criminal responsibility, forensic nursing, diagnostic misuse, misdiagnosis

Abstract

This conceptual analysis examines society's reflexive attribution of violent crime to mental illness, a phenomenon that profoundly shapes forensic nursing practice. Through composite case studies, the paper explores how psychological defense mechanisms, media dynamics, and diagnostic politics converge to create false narratives about the relationship between mental illness and violence. The analysis reveals that society's rush to pathologize criminal behavior serves multiple defensive functions: protecting just-world beliefs, maintaining psychological distance from human capacity for harm, and avoiding uncomfortable questions about systemic issues. The misapplication of trauma research, diagnostic hierarchies favoring "sympathetic" conditions, and the neuroscience mystique further distort forensic assessment. Evidence consistently demonstrates that individuals with serious mental illness are more likely to be victims than perpetrators of violence, and that personality pathology, substance use, and ordinary human motivations are more common drivers of criminal behavior than psychiatric illness. For forensic nurses operating at the intersection of healthcare, law enforcement, and public sentiment, these societal patterns create unique challenges in maintaining diagnostic integrity while facing pressure from attorneys, families, media, and institutional stakeholders. The paper provides frameworks for forensic nurses to navigate these pressures through "diagnostic courage"—the willingness to deliver accurate assessments despite conflicting preferred narratives. By understanding the psychological mechanisms underlying society's pathological need to pathologize, forensic nurses can better advocate for accurate understanding of both violence and mental illness, ultimately serving justice while protecting the dignity of those with genuine psychiatric conditions.

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Published

2025-08-17

How to Cite

Petreca, V. (2025). The Comfort of Madness: How Society’s Need to Pathologize Violence Undermines Justice and Stigmatizes Mental Illness. Journal of the Academy of Forensic Nursing, 3(2), 65–82. https://doi.org/10.29173/jafn880

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