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The police rely heavily on paid and unpaid informers: without them
clear-up rates would plummet, and many crimes would remain
undetected. Yet little is known about the informer system and how
it works, for example: who are these informers? how are they
recruited? how are they handled? who handles them? what sort of
information do they provide? Recent high profile cases have drawn
attention to the use of informers, there has been a growing debate
about the subject, and many feel that stricter controls are needed
- but how is this to be achieved without undermining the
effectiveness of the system? This is the first book of its kind on
informers in Britain, providing an invaluable source of information
and analysis from key authorities in the field.
Contents: Preface 1. Philip Bean and Teresa Nemitz Introduction 2 Joy Mott What Should Work: guidelines on the clinical management of opioid dependence in the UK 3. Ken Checinski and Hamid Ghodse Types of Treatments for Types of Patients 4. Michael Gossop Developments in the Treatment of Drug Problems 5. Colin Brewer Psychological and Pharmacological Components of Treatment 6. Douglas Longshore, Michael Prendergast and David Farrabee Coerced Treatment for Drug-Using Criminal Offenders 7. Nicholas Seivewright and Muhammad Iqbal Treating Patients with Comorbidities 8. Jay Carver Drug Testing as a Necessary Prerequisite for Treatment and for Crime Control 9. Philip Bean and Andrew Ravenscroft Therapeutic Addicts Revisited 10. Tammy L. Anderson and Lana Harrison Therapeutic Community Drug Treatment in the U.S. Criminal Justice System 11. Paul Hayes Treating Drug Users: the role of the National Treatment Agency for substance misuse 12. Philip Bean Linking Treatment Services to the Criminal Justice System 13. Joris Casselman Motivation Enhancement in Clients Referred from the Criminal Justice System
Contents: Preface 1. Philip Bean and Teresa Nemitz Introduction 2 Joy Mott What Should Work: guidelines on the clinical management of opioid dependence in the UK 3. Ken Checinski and Hamid Ghodse Types of Treatments for Types of Patients 4. Michael Gossop Developments in the Treatment of Drug Problems 5. Colin Brewer Psychological and Pharmacological Components of Treatment 6. Douglas Longshore, Michael Prendergast and David Farrabee Coerced Treatment for Drug-Using Criminal Offenders 7. Nicholas Seivewright and Muhammad Iqbal Treating Patients with Comorbidities 8. Jay Carver Drug Testing as a Necessary Prerequisite for Treatment and for Crime Control 9. Philip Bean and Andrew Ravenscroft Therapeutic Addicts Revisited 10. Tammy L. Anderson and Lana Harrison Therapeutic Community Drug Treatment in the U.S. Criminal Justice System 11. Paul Hayes Treating Drug Users: the role of the National Treatment Agency for substance misuse 12. Philip Bean Linking Treatment Services to the Criminal Justice System 13. Joris Casselman Motivation Enhancement in Clients Referred from the Criminal Justice System
The police rely heavily on paid and unpaid informers: without them
clear-up rates would plummet, and many crimes would remain
undetected. Yet little is known about the informer system and how
it works, for example: who are these informers? how are they
recruited? how are they handled? who handles them? what sort of
information do they provide? Recent high profile cases have drawn
attention to the use of informers, there has been a growing debate
about the subject, and many feel that stricter controls are needed
- but how is this to be achieved without undermining the
effectiveness of the system? This is the first book of its kind on
informers in Britain, providing an invaluable source of information
and analysis from key authorities in the field.
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