Drug courts
National Institute of Justice Year in Review 1996
Drug Treatment in the Community: A Case Study of System Integration Issues
Crime Act One Year Later: NIJ's Role
General Responsivity Adherence in Juvenile Drug Treatment Court: Examining the Impact on Substance-Use Outcome
Beyond Crime and Drug Use: Do Adult Drug Courts Produce Other Psychosocial Benefits?
Drug Courts: A Conceptual Framework
Classifying Driving-While-Intoxicated Offenders: The Experiences of a Citywide DWI Drug Court
Opening Pandora's Box: How Does Defendant Race Influence Plea Bargaining?
Perceptions of Drug Court: How Offenders View Ease of Program Completion, Strengths and Weaknesses, and the Impact on Their Lives
Everyday Hassles: Barriers to Recovery in Drug Court
Treatment Modality, Failure, and Re-Arrest: A Test of the Risk Principle With Substance-Abusing Criminal Defendants
Drug Tests and the Prediction of Pretrial Misconduct: Findings and Policy Issues
Do Drug Courts Works? Getting Inside the Drug Court Black Box
Drug Courts: A Bridge Between Criminal Justice and Health Services
Drug Courts May Reap Big Savings for Corrections and Taxpayers
Implementing a Diversion-to-Treatment Law in California: Orange County's Experience
Drunk Drivers, DWI "Drug Court" Treatment, and Recidivism: Who Fails?
Maricopa County's Drug Court: An Innovative Program for First- Time Drug Offenders on Probation
Decade of Drug Treatment Court Research
Community Courts and the Process of Accountability: Consensus and Conflict at the Red Hook Community Justice Center
Due Process and the Role of Judges
White Collar Crime
The subprime mortgage industry collapse has led to a record number of foreclosures. In this environment, the interest mortgage fraud has risen, along with questions of how fraud contributed to the crisis. Henry Pontell and Sally Simpson discuss what they have learned about investigating and prosecuting white-collar criminals, the role of corporate ethics in America, and what policymakers and lawyers can learn from evidence of fraud.
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Try Again, Fail Again, Fail Better: Lessons from Community Courts
Change doesn't come easy, particularly within an institution as large and complex as the criminal justice system. Greg Berman, Director of the Center for Court Innovation, offered lessons from several efforts to make reform stick in criminal justice settings. In particular, he focused on the development of community courts — experimental court projects that are attempting to reduce both crime and incarceration in dozens of cities across the U.S. and around the world.
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