The Sequential Intercept Model and Criminal Justice
Promoting Community Alternatives for Individuals with Serious Mental Illness
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP USA
- Date of Publication 9 April 2015
- ISBN 9780199826759
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages320 pages
- Size 236x160x30 mm
- Weight 540 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
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.
MoreLong description:
The number of individuals with severe mental illness in the criminal justice system is shockingly high. However, there is a wealth of research that shows that the traditional incarceration model is not effective with this population, and that many of these individuals can be helped in the community at less cost without increased risk to public safety by addressing their risk-relevant needs and improvinge their opportunities for recovery. As a result, during the last decade there has been an increasing interest in community-based alternatives to incarceration for individuals with severe mental illness.
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. Developed by Drs. Mark Munetz and Patricia Griffin, the Sequential Intercept Model (SIM) identifies five conceptual points at which standard criminal processing can be interrupted to offer community-based alternatives: (1) law enforcement/emergency services; (2) initial detention/initial court hearings; (3) jails/courts; (4) re-entry; and (5) community corrections/support. This volume describes the SIM in detail and reviews empirical evidence for each of its five points of interception. Chapters focus on its implementation, starting with an analysis of the national and state-level initiatives, then addressing specific challenges. A final section suggests how the SIM might be applied successfully to other populations (e.g., those with developmental disabilities). 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.
In The Sequential Intercept Model and Criminal Justice, Patricia Griffin and her co-editors have somehow managed to get a Who's Who of contributors to flesh out the nuanced implications of this generation's most important conceptual contribution to community-based services for justice-involved people with mental illness. The book seamlessly weaves together up-to-the-minute academic research and down-to-earth clinical practice. It provides nothing less than a pellucid roadmap for transforming the highly contested terrain where the criminal justice and mental health systems meet and often clash.
Table of Contents:
Contents
Chapter 1: The Movement Toward Community-Based Alternatives to Criminal Justice Involvement and Incarceration for People with Severe Mental Illness
Kirk Heilbrun, David DeMatteo, Heidi Strohmaier, and Meghann Galloway
Chapter 2: Development of the SIM
Mark Munetz, Patricia Griffin, and Natalie Bonfine
Chapter 3: Law Enforcement and Emergency Services
Melissa Reuland and Kento Yasuhara
Chapter 4: Booking and Initial Hearings: Intercept 2
Patricia Griffin, Kirk Heilbrun, Dave DeMatteo, and Stephanie Brooks-Holliday
Chapter 5: Intercept 3: Jails and Courts
Siyu Liu and Allison D. Redlich
Chapter 6: Intercept Four: Reentry from Jails and Prisons
Fred Osher and Christopher King
Chapter 7: Applying the Sequential Intercept Model to Reduce Recidivism Among Probationers and Parolees with Mental Illness
Jennifer Eno Louden, Sarah Manchak, Megan O'Connor, and Jennifer L. Skeem
Chapter 8: From Resource Center to Systems Change: The GAINS Model
Henry J. Steadman, Brian Case, Chanson Noether, Samantha Califano, and Susan Salasin
Chapter 9: Using the Consensus Project Report to Plan for System Change
Amanda Brown Cross, Carol Schubert, and Kirk Heilbrun
Chapter 10: State-Level Dissemination and Promotion Initiatives: Florida, Illinois, Massachusetts, Ohio, and Pennsylvania
David DeMatteo, Mark Munetz, John Petrila, Albert Grudzinskas, Jr., William Fisher, Sarah Filone, Katy Winckworth-Prejsnar, and Michelle Rock
Chapter 11: Rethinking Mental Health Legal Policy and Practice: History and Needed Reforms
Steve Leifman and Tim Coffey
Chapter 12: The Sequential Intercept Model as a Platform for Data-Driven Practice and Policy
Edward P. Mulvey and Carol A. Schubert
Chapter 13: Sequential Intercept Mapping, Confidentiality, and the Cross-System Sharing of Health-Related Information
John Petrila, Hallie Fader-Towe, and Allison B. Hill
Chapter 14: Using the Sequential Intercept Model in Cross-Systems Mapping
Patricia Griffin, Casey LaDuke, Dan Abreu, Christina Finello, Katy Winckworth-Prejsnar, and Sarah Dorrell
Chapter 15: The Sequential Intercept Model: Current Status, Future Directions
Kirk Heilbrun, Edward Mulvey, Dave DeMatteo, Carol Schubert, and Patty Griffin