BOOK
Rethinking Drug Courts: International Experiences of a US Policy Export
John Collins | Winifred Agnew-Pauley | Alexander Soderholm
(2019)
Additional Information
Book Details
Abstract
What are drug courts? Do they work? Why are they so popular? Should countries be expanding them or rolling them back? These are some of the questions this volume attempts to answer. Simultaneously popular and problematic, loved and loathed, drug courts have proven an enduring topic for discussion in international drug policy debates. Starting in Miami in the 1980s and being exported enthusiastically across the world, we now have a range of international case studies to re-examine their effectiveness. Whereas traditional debates tended towards binaries like “do they work?”, this volume attempts to unpick their export and implementation, contextualising their efficacy. Instead of a simple yes or no answer, the book provides key insights into the operation of drug courts in various parts of the world. The case studies range from a relatively successful small-scale model in Australia, to the large and unwieldy business of drug courts in the US, to their failed scale-up in Brazil and the small and institutionally adrift models that have been tried in England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland. The book concludes that although drug courts can be made to work in very specific niche contexts, the singular focus on them as being close to a “silver bullet” obscures the real issues that societies must address, including (but not limited to) a more comprehensive and full-spectrum focus on diverting drug-involved individuals away from the criminal justice system.
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
_GoBack | 1 | ||
_GoBack | xix | ||
Introduction | vii | ||
About the editors and authors | xix | ||
Drug Courts in the United States: Punishment for ‘Patients’? | 1 | ||
By Joanne Csete | 1 | ||
Drug Courts in Australia | 21 | ||
By Caitlin Hughes and Marian Shanahan | 21 | ||
The Irish Experience: Policy Transfer from US Drug Courts | 51 | ||
By John Collins | 51 | ||
Drug Policy, Therapeutic Jurisprudence and Criminal Justice in Brazil | 75 | ||
By Luiz Guilherme Mendes de Paiva | 75 | ||
Explaining the Failure of Drug Courts in the UK | 99 | ||
By John Collins | 99 | ||
Diversion in the criminal justice system: examining interventions for drug-involved individuals | 123 | ||
By Winifred Agnew-Pauley | 123 |