- Gustav Aschaffenburg
Gustav Aschaffenburg (
May 23 ,1866 –September 2 ,1944 ) was a Germanpsychiatrist who was a native ofZweibrücken . In 1890 he received his medical doctorate from theUniversity of Strasbourg , and later was an assistant toEmil Kraepelin at the psychiatric university clinic inHeidelberg . Afterwards, he practiced psychiatric medicine at the Universities of Halle and Cologne. In the 1930s Aschaffenburg's academic career atCologne was terminated by the Nazi edict, "Gesetz zur Wiederherstellung des Berufsbeamtentums", and he emigrated to the United States where he worked as a professor at theCatholic University of America inWashington D.C. and atJohns Hopkins University inBaltimore .Aschaffenburg was a pioneer in the fields of
criminology andforensic psychiatry . He believed that humans were less influenced byheredity than by one's social environment, and stressed that from a psychological viewpoint, criminal behaviour was a form of socially maladaptive behavior, and not a mental pathological condition. In Germany, he was publisher of a monthly journal regarding criminal psychology and penal reform, and in 1908 published "Das Verbrechen und seine Bekämpfung", a highly influentialtextbook on criminology.References
* [http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=de&u=http://www.catalogus-professorum-halensis.de/aschaffenburggustav.html&sa=X&oi=translate&resnum=7&ct=result&prev=/search%3Fq%3D%2522Gustav%2BAschaffenburg%2522%2B1866%26start%3D20%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DN Biography of Gustav Aschaffenburg, translated by Google]
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