|
Showing 1 - 1 of
1 matches in All Departments
Public behavioral health organizations serving those involved in
the criminal justice system, such as problem-solving courts,
correctional facilities, and parole or probation, often lack the
necessary resources for long-standing effective treatment, and may
struggle to keep up with research standards and retaining funding.
To overcome these hurdles, many organizations have turned to
university-led collaborations. University and Public Behavioral
Health Organization Collaboration in Justice Contexts begins by
introducing the relevant purpose and definitions of such
partnerships. Each of the nine contributed chapters that follow
features a particular collaboration between a university and a
public behavioral health organization. Chapters are structured
around a description of the collaboration's purposes, beginning,
leadership, who is served, services, operations, effectiveness
measurement, and financial arrangements. The descriptions provided
of each project are then aggregated into a larger model for success
which is detailed in the final chapter, along with a distillation
of lessons learned in building, operating, and sustaining a
successful collaboration. These lessons are grouped into specific
categories: planning, working together, training, consultation,
financial considerations, personnel, and research. By considering
these nine exemplary projects and what they can teach us about such
collaborations, this book constitutes an essential guide for those
looking to establish comparable partnerships between universities
and public behavioral health organizations in a criminal justice
context.
|
|