There is mounting evidence that mental health courts (MHCs) reduce criminal recidivism and increase use of mental health services. Although not yet empirically tested, procedural justice has been proposed as one potential mechanism that promotes change and improves outcomes for MHC participants. In this article, we investigate MHC participants ’ perceptions of procedural justice in interactions with MHC staff as well as the role of procedural justice in participants ’ MHC program experiences. Participants from two MHC programs were invited to complete quantitative measures and a semistructured interview about their MHC experiences and perceptions of procedural justice. Univariate and bivariate analyses and qualitative analysis were used to ...
Despite the proliferation of mental health courts across the United States, virtually no attention h...
One of the most important developments in the past two decades in the way that criminal defendants w...
Between 10 to 20% of jail inmates have a serious mental illness, while 4% of the general public has ...
This Article compares the levels of procedural justice afforded to persons with severe mental illnes...
According to procedural justice theory, a central factor shaping perceptions about authority figures...
This dissertation is motivated by the expansion of the criminal justice system into the domain of so...
The emergence of mental health courts in the 1990s is due to the high prevalence of mentally ill per...
Objective: Mandated community treatment has been proposed as a mechanism to engage people with sever...
The number of problem-solving courts has grown substantially since the mid-1990s. Research consisten...
Procedural justice theory posits that the process by which disputes are resolved in¯uences perceptio...
‘Improving therapeutic outcomes for defendants: measuring the therapeutic contributions of legal act...
Background: Theories of procedural justice suggest that individuals who experience the processes and...
Background Given the high prevalence of mental health problems among prisoners, knowledge on its det...
How defendants are selected into mental health courts (MHC) is central to issues of fairness, effica...
Session 1: Mental Health. Presenter: Kathi R. Trawver, Ph.D., University of Texas at Austin (2011) -...
Despite the proliferation of mental health courts across the United States, virtually no attention h...
One of the most important developments in the past two decades in the way that criminal defendants w...
Between 10 to 20% of jail inmates have a serious mental illness, while 4% of the general public has ...
This Article compares the levels of procedural justice afforded to persons with severe mental illnes...
According to procedural justice theory, a central factor shaping perceptions about authority figures...
This dissertation is motivated by the expansion of the criminal justice system into the domain of so...
The emergence of mental health courts in the 1990s is due to the high prevalence of mentally ill per...
Objective: Mandated community treatment has been proposed as a mechanism to engage people with sever...
The number of problem-solving courts has grown substantially since the mid-1990s. Research consisten...
Procedural justice theory posits that the process by which disputes are resolved in¯uences perceptio...
‘Improving therapeutic outcomes for defendants: measuring the therapeutic contributions of legal act...
Background: Theories of procedural justice suggest that individuals who experience the processes and...
Background Given the high prevalence of mental health problems among prisoners, knowledge on its det...
How defendants are selected into mental health courts (MHC) is central to issues of fairness, effica...
Session 1: Mental Health. Presenter: Kathi R. Trawver, Ph.D., University of Texas at Austin (2011) -...
Despite the proliferation of mental health courts across the United States, virtually no attention h...
One of the most important developments in the past two decades in the way that criminal defendants w...
Between 10 to 20% of jail inmates have a serious mental illness, while 4% of the general public has ...