The University Archives has determined that this item is of continuing value to OSU's history.Presenter: John R. Belcher, Ph.D. - "Commitment Laws and Homelessness Among Chronically Mentally Ill Persons: Is There a Need for a More Liberal Commitment Law?".The Ohio State University College of Social Wor
In its Spring 1985 issue, this Review published an article by Professors Mary L. Durham and John Q. ...
Psychiatrists have proposed broadened commitment statutes based on need for care and treatment, and ...
The following will examine both involuntary commitment and deinstitutionalization, as well as some r...
The University Archives has determined that this item is of continuing value to OSU's history.Presen...
The passage of the District of Columbia Hospitalization of the Mentally Ill Act in 1965 and more rec...
It is often presumed that the legal rights of those who are mentally ill or alleged to be mentally i...
It is often presumed that the legal rights of those who are mentally ill or alleged to be mentally i...
Nebraska\u27s procedures for the civil commitment of the mentally ill are lacking in protections for...
Traditionally, the power of the state has included the power to commit mentally ill citizens to psyc...
Even in areas where legal representation has become available to the poor through the efforts of Leg...
Even in areas where legal representation has become available to the poor through the efforts of Leg...
This article describes recent devel-opments in mental health laws in the United States, especially a...
The passage of the District of Columbia Hospitalization of the Mentally Ill Act in 1965 and more rec...
Almost every American state allows civil commitment upon a finding that a person, as a result of men...
Modern nation-states have been trapped in recurring cycles of incarcerating and emancipating residen...
In its Spring 1985 issue, this Review published an article by Professors Mary L. Durham and John Q. ...
Psychiatrists have proposed broadened commitment statutes based on need for care and treatment, and ...
The following will examine both involuntary commitment and deinstitutionalization, as well as some r...
The University Archives has determined that this item is of continuing value to OSU's history.Presen...
The passage of the District of Columbia Hospitalization of the Mentally Ill Act in 1965 and more rec...
It is often presumed that the legal rights of those who are mentally ill or alleged to be mentally i...
It is often presumed that the legal rights of those who are mentally ill or alleged to be mentally i...
Nebraska\u27s procedures for the civil commitment of the mentally ill are lacking in protections for...
Traditionally, the power of the state has included the power to commit mentally ill citizens to psyc...
Even in areas where legal representation has become available to the poor through the efforts of Leg...
Even in areas where legal representation has become available to the poor through the efforts of Leg...
This article describes recent devel-opments in mental health laws in the United States, especially a...
The passage of the District of Columbia Hospitalization of the Mentally Ill Act in 1965 and more rec...
Almost every American state allows civil commitment upon a finding that a person, as a result of men...
Modern nation-states have been trapped in recurring cycles of incarcerating and emancipating residen...
In its Spring 1985 issue, this Review published an article by Professors Mary L. Durham and John Q. ...
Psychiatrists have proposed broadened commitment statutes based on need for care and treatment, and ...
The following will examine both involuntary commitment and deinstitutionalization, as well as some r...