Problem-solving courts appear to achieve outcomes that are not common in mainstream courts. There are increasing calls for the adoption of more therapeutic and problem-solving practices by mainstream judges in civil and criminal courts in a number of jurisdictions, most notably in the United States and Australia. Currently, a judge who sets out to exercise a significant therapeutic function is likely to be doing so in a specialist court or jurisdiction, outside the mainstream court system, and arguably, outside the adversarial paradigm itself. To some extent, this work is tolerated but marginalised. However, do therapeutic and problem-solving functions have the potential to help define, rather than simply complement, the role of judicial of...
Modern courts have evolved around two central legal traditions—the adversarial and the inquisitorial...
In the more than 30 years since the drug court model transformed the criminal justice landscape, pro...
There has been growing interest in recent years in developing ‘non-adversarial’ forms of court based...
Problem-solving courts appear to achieve outcomes that are not common in mainstream courts. There ar...
Problem solving courts appear to achieve outcomes which are not common in mainstream courts. There a...
Problem solving courts appear to achieve outcomes which are not common in mainstream courts. There a...
Court costs, resource-intensive trials, booming prison populations and the obduracy of recidivism ra...
This article offers a number of suggestions concerning how judges should act in problem solving cour...
‘Improving therapeutic outcomes for defendants: measuring the therapeutic contributions of legal act...
In recent years, an array of specialized “problem-solving courts ” has emerged throughout the countr...
One aspect of a possible new era is the increasing ad hoc activity of various interest groups, inclu...
Problem-solving courts are not a new innovation, but their use and implementation appears to be grow...
The last several decades have seen a proliferation of specialized courts, including within the famil...
Therapeutic jurisprudence has inspired and influenced a range of criminal law and justice reforms wh...
If therapeutic jurisprudence is so good, its applicability should not be limited to the trial courts...
Modern courts have evolved around two central legal traditions—the adversarial and the inquisitorial...
In the more than 30 years since the drug court model transformed the criminal justice landscape, pro...
There has been growing interest in recent years in developing ‘non-adversarial’ forms of court based...
Problem-solving courts appear to achieve outcomes that are not common in mainstream courts. There ar...
Problem solving courts appear to achieve outcomes which are not common in mainstream courts. There a...
Problem solving courts appear to achieve outcomes which are not common in mainstream courts. There a...
Court costs, resource-intensive trials, booming prison populations and the obduracy of recidivism ra...
This article offers a number of suggestions concerning how judges should act in problem solving cour...
‘Improving therapeutic outcomes for defendants: measuring the therapeutic contributions of legal act...
In recent years, an array of specialized “problem-solving courts ” has emerged throughout the countr...
One aspect of a possible new era is the increasing ad hoc activity of various interest groups, inclu...
Problem-solving courts are not a new innovation, but their use and implementation appears to be grow...
The last several decades have seen a proliferation of specialized courts, including within the famil...
Therapeutic jurisprudence has inspired and influenced a range of criminal law and justice reforms wh...
If therapeutic jurisprudence is so good, its applicability should not be limited to the trial courts...
Modern courts have evolved around two central legal traditions—the adversarial and the inquisitorial...
In the more than 30 years since the drug court model transformed the criminal justice landscape, pro...
There has been growing interest in recent years in developing ‘non-adversarial’ forms of court based...