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Problem Solving Courts: A Measure of Justice

Autor JoAnn Miller, Donald C. Johnson
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 16 noi 2009
Problem Solving Courts explores a relatively new approach to criminal justice-one that can have a powerful impact on how convicts connect with their communities. Problem solving courts, born out of the drug court movement in the 1980s, are run by judges who, with the assistance of law enforcement agents and mental health workers, meet with convicts on a weekly basis to talk about their treatment. Treatment programs often include therapy, in addition to the possibility of incarceration or early "parole" in which an offender can complete his or her sentence under the jurisdiction of the court. In this unique collaboration, scholar JoAnn Miller and judge Donald C. Johnson, creators of three successful problem solving courts themselves, address the compelling needs for alternatives to prisons, analyze problem solving courts in depth, and assess the impact problem solving courts can have on convicts and their communities.

Problem solving courts can include: community courts that seek to improve the quality of life in neighborhoods struggling with crime and disorder; drug treatment courts that link addicted offenders to drug treatment instead of incarceration; family treatment courts that seek to stop the cycle of drugs, child neglect, and foster care; and domestic violence courts that emphasize victim safety and defendant accountability.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781442200807
ISBN-10: 1442200804
Pagini: 277
Dimensiuni: 162 x 240 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.56 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: Setting the Stage
Chapter 1: Measured Justice and Problem Solving Court Principles
Chapter 2: The Purposes, Promises, and the Magic of Contemporary Criminal Law and Criminal Justice in the United States
Chapter 3: A Problem Solving Court Jurisprudence
Chapter 4: Timeless Problems, Innovative Solutions
Part II: Courts, Prisons, and Communities
Chapter 5: Responding to Reality: They all Come Home
Chapter 6: Blended Social Institutions
Chapter 7: The Community: What it Needs and What it Deserves
Chapter 8: Words, Words, Words: Distinctions and Differences
Part III: Performances and Transformations
Chapter 9: Transforming Master Status
Chapter 10: Backstage Action
Chapter 11: Front-Stage Performances
Chapter 12: Finale
Appendix A Biographical Sketches
Appendix B Reentry Court Participation Agreement
Appendix C Waiver Forms
Appendix D Reentry Court Participant's Handbook
Notes
References
Index
About the Authors

Recenzii

Miller and Johnson's Problem Solving Courts is a fascinating introduction and examination of the possibilities and limitations of problem solving courts as 'blended institutions' that seek to reduce recidivism and protect the community by addressing offenders' underlying behavioral, socio-emotional, and human capital deficits.
Problem solving courts (PSC) have exploded onto the criminal justice scene in the last twenty years....JoAnn Miller and Donald C. Johnson in Problem Solving Courts dig past recidivism studies by reporting their findings from a three-year institutional ethnographic study of three different types of PSCs....The important question they address is, why do some specialty courts seem to work better than others? Miller and Johnson's study helps us understand that the problems faced by PSCs are not just tough-to-reform defendants, but tough-to-reform agencies.
The authors present detailed case studies and research showing how the theater of law can provide alternatives to incarceration and end the tragic cycle of recidivism.
This book is creative and fresh in its approach. The authors cover the length and breadth of socio-legal studies related to Problem Solving Courts. By including the voices of repeat offenders, classical social scientists, and cultural giants such as Shakespeare, they go far beyond the conventional. This book poses an intellectual challenge to students, legal practitioners, and social scientists to draw upon a breadth of perspectives in their conception of the justice process. The book provides a behind the scenes look at Problem Solving Courts, and is required reading for anyone interested in understanding contemporary jurisprudence.
"According to Miller, part of re-entry court's success was the enthusiasm of everyone involved-for instance, a doctorate student at Purde who was on the team started a reading program for the recently released prisoners"

"Miller said she could count on one hand the number of participants who re-offended. And in those cases, they either violated probation or program rules or committed minor crimes, such as one man found intoxicated and asleep in his vehicle"