Sociologists have long-raised concern about disparate treatment in the justice system. Focal concerns have become the dominant perspective in explaining these disparities in legal processing decisions. Despite the growth of problem-solving courts, little research has examined how this perspective operates in nontraditional court settings. This article used a mixed-method approach to examine focal concerns in a mental health court (MHC). Observational findings indicate that gender and length of time in court influence the court's contextualization of noncompliance. While discussions of race were absent in observational data, competing-risk survival analysis finds that gender and race interact to predict MHC termination
Mental health courts (MHCs) are part of an umbrella of specialty courts in which court officials, la...
In this paper, the author presents ethnographic research and analysis of how criminal justice and me...
Objective assessments of the risks and needs of court-involved youth may lead to judicial processing...
Mental health court (MHC) research consistently finds that defendants who successfully complete and ...
How defendants are selected into mental health courts (MHC) is central to issues of fairness, effica...
Mental health courts (MHCs) have emerged as one option to address the needs of people with severe me...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2017-06Problem solving courts are a bastion of judicial...
Between 10 to 20% of jail inmates have a serious mental illness, while 4% of the general public has ...
Drawing on Link and colleagues' modified labeling theory, this article examines whether the stigma m...
Mental health courts are one means to address the involvement of persons with mental illness in the ...
The number of mental health courts in the United States is rapidly increasing, from one in 1997 to n...
Despite the proliferation of mental health courts across the United States, virtually no attention h...
This study uses the focal concerns perspective to examine whether judicial downward departures, inc...
The emergence of mental health courts in the 1990s is due to the high prevalence of mentally ill per...
Mental health court programs have proliferated in the United States in the past few decades in respo...
Mental health courts (MHCs) are part of an umbrella of specialty courts in which court officials, la...
In this paper, the author presents ethnographic research and analysis of how criminal justice and me...
Objective assessments of the risks and needs of court-involved youth may lead to judicial processing...
Mental health court (MHC) research consistently finds that defendants who successfully complete and ...
How defendants are selected into mental health courts (MHC) is central to issues of fairness, effica...
Mental health courts (MHCs) have emerged as one option to address the needs of people with severe me...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2017-06Problem solving courts are a bastion of judicial...
Between 10 to 20% of jail inmates have a serious mental illness, while 4% of the general public has ...
Drawing on Link and colleagues' modified labeling theory, this article examines whether the stigma m...
Mental health courts are one means to address the involvement of persons with mental illness in the ...
The number of mental health courts in the United States is rapidly increasing, from one in 1997 to n...
Despite the proliferation of mental health courts across the United States, virtually no attention h...
This study uses the focal concerns perspective to examine whether judicial downward departures, inc...
The emergence of mental health courts in the 1990s is due to the high prevalence of mentally ill per...
Mental health court programs have proliferated in the United States in the past few decades in respo...
Mental health courts (MHCs) are part of an umbrella of specialty courts in which court officials, la...
In this paper, the author presents ethnographic research and analysis of how criminal justice and me...
Objective assessments of the risks and needs of court-involved youth may lead to judicial processing...