Since you are not willing to read his books we can't really discuss his work. Nice meeting you though.
I have included numerous links to Robert Hare research and articles. Here is one:
Fraud Magazine Cover Article - July-August 2008
and here is another;
A Reporter at Large: Suffering Souls : The New Yorker
Here is another worth taking a look at for any interested poster;
So says a new study carried out by Dr. Essi Viding of Kings College, London. Dr. Viding carried out his research using twins and found that psychopathic tendencies are highly heritable.
New research on the origins of antisocial behaviour, published in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, suggests that early-onset antisocial behaviour in children with psychopathic tendencies is largely inherited.
The findings are the result of extensive research funded by the Medical Research Council, the Department of Health and the Home Office, and carried out by Dr. Essi Viding of the MRC Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, within the Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London.
Past research has shown that children with early-onset antisocial behaviour show problem behaviours for a variety of different reasons. One warning sign of vulnerability for antisocial behaviour is psychopathic tendencies, i.e. lack of empathy and remorse. Dr Viding's research looked into the factors that contribute to antisocial behaviour in children with and without psychopathic tendencies. By studying sets of 7-year-old twins, Dr. Viding and her colleagues were able to pinpoint to what extent antisocial behaviour in these two groups was caused by genetic and/or environmental risk factors.
Mangan's: Psychopaths Born, Not Made