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Police Responses to People with Mental Illnesses - Global Challenges (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,523
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Police Responses to People with Mental Illnesses - Global Challenges (Paperback)
Series: Police Practice and Research
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According to the World Health Organisation during their lifetime
more than one quarter of all individuals will develop one or more
mental or behavioural disorders. Given prevalence data like this it
is not surprising that wherever they reside on the planet many
persons suffering from a mental disorder, or as is more commonly
termed in popular parlance a mental illness, are likely to come
into contact with police at some stage in their lives. Indeed,
research conducted in a number of countries suggests that about 10
per cent of all community police work involves some form of
interaction with a person with a mental illness. From a police
perspective these encounters are not only frequent but also often
sensitive and challenging. Despite the difficulties associated with
this important aspect of community policing surprisingly scant
attention has been given to the development of empirically tested
and established best practice approaches to managing police
interactions with persons with mental illnesses. The literature
that does exist is principally derived from North American sources
although more recent and interesting developments have been
reported in Australia and the United Kingdom. The principal aim of
Police Responses to People with Mental Illnesses is to seek to
reduce this gap in the literature by providing an international
overview of some of the latest research and policy developments in
the field, and the challenges still to be confronted in many places
in overcoming cultural and associated barriers to protecting the
rights of the mentally ill. This book was originally published as a
special issue of Police Practice and Research: An International
Journal.
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