“Doing Their Jobs”: Legal Regulation of Policing and Suicide Risk of Justice-Involved Persons in Singapore

Abstract

Using the island nation-state of Singapore as a case study, this article conceptualizes the legal regulation of policing as a risk factor for suicide among justice-involved persons. Through the lens of legal epidemiology, it discusses public health research and criminal procedure jurisprudence to theorize the unintended consequences of the police “doing their job” in accordance with a legal framework that prioritizes crime control and order maintenance. It examines how two aspects of policing—the power of arrest and the interrogation process—may influence the mental health and suicide risk of justice-involved persons. This article thus calls attention to the role of law in shaping policing practices and their effects and lends support to calls for stronger due process protections from a public health perspective.

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Published: 2024-11-20
Issue:Online First
Section:Articles
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How to Cite
Yang, D. W. J. (2024) “‘Doing Their Jobs’: Legal Regulation of Policing and Suicide Risk of Justice-Involved Persons in Singapore”, International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy. doi: 10.5204/ssj.3677.

Author Biography

University of California, Berkeley
 United States

Daryl WJ Yang is a practising Singapore-qualified lawyer and Honorary Secretary of the Disabled People’s Association Singapore. A Fulbright scholar, Daryl obtained his LLM from Berkeley Law, where he specialized in disability and discrimination law. His research interests include disability legal studies, international human rights and criminal justice.