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Beyond Criminalization: Toward a Criminologically Informed Framework for Mental Health Policy and Services Research

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Abstract

The problems posed by persons with mental illness involved with the criminal justice system are vexing ones that have received attention at the local, state and national levels. The conceptual model currently guiding research and social action around these problems is shaped by the “criminalization” perspective and the associated belief that reconnecting individuals with mental health services will by itself reduce risk for arrest. This paper argues that such efforts are necessary but possibly not sufficient to achieve that reduction. Arguing for the need to develop a services research framework that identifies a broader range of risk factors for arrest, we describe three potentially useful criminological frameworks—the “life course,” “local life circumstances” and “routine activities” perspectives. Their utility as platforms for research in a population of persons with mental illness is discussed and suggestions are provided with regard to how services research guided by these perspectives might inform the development of community-based services aimed at reducing risk of arrest.

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Acknowledgements

Development of this paper was supported by The Center for Mental Health Services Research, funded by National Institute of Mental Health grant PO1-MH66170. The authors wish to thank two anonymous reviewers of an earlier version of this paper for their most helpful suggestions.

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Correspondence to William H. Fisher.

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Fisher, W.H., Silver, E. & Wolff, N. Beyond Criminalization: Toward a Criminologically Informed Framework for Mental Health Policy and Services Research. Adm Policy Ment Health 33, 544–557 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10488-006-0072-0

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