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DESCRIPTION: People with mental illness in the criminal justice
system are a vexing problem in many countries. Efforts to cope with
this problem have taken a number of forms and this volume explores
the key issues in this area. Whether and to what extent any of
these efforts achieve their goals remains a significant question
for researchers from a range of disciplines and for actors and
stakeholders from various sectors of the mental health and criminal
justice systems TABLE OF CONTENTS: Contributors; Introduction;
Criminal Justice Involvement and Severe Mental Illness; Where is
the 'illness' in the criminalization of mental illness?; Treatment
Modalities for Offenders with Mental Illness; Community mental
health services and criminal justice involvement among persons with
mental illness; Case management and the forensic client; The impact
of 'new generation' anti-psychotic medications on criminal justice
outcomes; Embedding Community Mental Health Service System
Interventions in the Criminal Justice Process: From Arrest to
Release; Jail diversion for people with mental illness: what do we
really know); The nature of the alliance: an anthropological look
at the practice of forensic psychiatry; Courting the court: courts
as agents for treatment and justice; Prison, hospital or community:
community re-entry and mentally ill offenders.
Research on mental health services for children and adolescents has
become a vibrant subspecialty within the larger field of mental
health services research. This research program experienced a
somewhat later start than that focusing on adults, and faces a set
of issues and challenges that are both different and in many ways
more complex.
The served population itself is bounded by infancy and the late
teen years, and includes all age groups in between. This
developmental spectrum naturally necessitates there being a
correspondingly diverse array of mental health services. The
disorders experienced by children and adolescents can become
apparent in the family, the school, the pediatrician??'s office,
the social welfare agency or the courts, and the settings in which
services may be provided can include any or all of these, as well
as numerous others. Indeed, it has become standard practice in
discussing mental health service delivery for this population to
emphasize ???systems of care, ??? although identifying the outlines
and boundaries of such systems can itself be a daunting task.
The chapters in this volume singly and collectively reflect the
richness and complexity of research in this burgeoning and vitally
important area and also highlight the novel conceptual and
methodological approaches researchers in this field are taking in
tackling its most critical issues.
*Focuses on the unique challenges related to mental health services
for children
*Examines the different settings (school, home, community, etc.)
where treatment and diagnosis may take place
*Reviews literature in the area and discusses the creative
approaches taken by researchers
Over the centuries work for persons with severe mental illness has
ranged from virtual slave labor to institutional peonage to
contemporary rehabilitative programs that seek to assist
individuals in re-entering the workplace. How best to do this
remains an open question however, and has captured the attention of
researchers from a broad range of disciplines, from rehabilitation
research to labor economics. This volume provides a sense of this
diversity and an overview of research perspectives in this
critically important area. Included are chapters discussing
important new theoretical frameworks, issues in the evaluation of
programmatic efforts to enhance employment opportunities, and
discussions grounded in large scale social and economic
perspectives.
This exciting new reader in environmental history provides a
framework for understanding the relations between ecosystems and
world-systems over time. Alf Hornborg, J. R. McNeill, and Joan
Martinez-Alier have brought together a group of the foremost
writers from the social, historical, and geographical sciences to
provide an overview of the ecological dimension of global, economic
processes, with a long-term, historical perspective. Readers are
challenged to integrate studies of the Earth-system with studies of
the world-system, and to reconceptualize the relations between
human beings and their environment, as well as the challenges of
global sustainability.
This exciting new reader in environmental history provides a
framework for understanding the relations between ecosystems and
world-systems over time. Alf Hornborg, J. R. McNeill, and Joan
Martinez-Alier have brought together a group of the foremost
writers from the social, historical, and geographical sciences to
provide an overview of the ecological dimension of global, economic
processes, with a long-term, historical perspective. Readers are
challenged to integrate studies of the Earth-system with studies of
the world-system, and to reconceptualize the relations between
human beings and their environment, as well as the challenges of
global sustainability.
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