ORPP logo

The Sequential Intercept Model and Criminal Justice : Promoting Community Alternatives for Individuals with Serious Mental Illness.

Griffin, Patricia A.

The Sequential Intercept Model and Criminal Justice : Promoting Community Alternatives for Individuals with Serious Mental Illness. - 1st ed. - 1 online resource (321 pages)

Cover -- The Sequential Intercept Model and Criminal Justice Promoting Community Alternatives for Individuals with Serious Mental Illness -- Copyright -- Contents -- About the Editors -- Contributors -- 1 The Movement Toward Community-Based Alternatives to Criminal Justice Involvement and Incarceration for People with Severe Mental Illness -- 2 Development of the Sequential Intercept Model: The Search for a Conceptual Model -- 3 Law Enforcement and Emergency Services -- 4 Initial Detention and Initial Hearings: Intercept 2 -- 5 Intercept 3: Jails and Courts -- 6 Intercept 4: Reentry from Jails and Prisons -- 7 Applying the Sequential Intercept Model to Reduce Recidivism Among Probationers and Parolees with Mental Illness -- 8 From Resource Center to Systems Change: The GAINS Model -- 9 Using the Consensus Project Report to Plan for System Change -- 10 State-Level Dissemination and Promotion Initiatives: Florida, Illinois, Massachusetts, Ohio, and Pennsylvania -- 11 Rethinking Mental Health Legal Policy and Practice: History and Needed Reforms -- 12 The Sequential Intercept Model as a Platform for Data-Driven Practice and Policy -- 13 Using the Sequential Intercept Model in Cross-Systems Mapping -- 14 Sequential Intercept Mapping, Confidentiality, and the Cross-System Sharing of Health-Related Information -- 15 The Sequential Intercept Model: Current Status, Future Directions -- Index.

The Sequential Intercept Model and Criminal Justice offers an overview of the recent changes in correctional policy and practice that reflect an increased focus on community-based alternatives for offenders. This volume will appeal to policy makers who are considering community-based alternatives, practitioners who carry out these changes, and program evaluators who seek to document the impact of such changes.

9780190234218


Mentally ill offenders -- United States.
People with mental disabilities and crime -- United States.
Criminal justice, Administration of -- United States.
Alternatives to imprisonment -- United States.
Criminals -- Mental health -- United States.


Electronic books.

HV6133 .S39 2014

364.3/80973

© 2024 Resource Centre. All rights reserved.