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People with serious mental illness (SMI) are prominently and unjustly overrepresented in the criminal legal system. More than one-third-and in some studies more than two-thirds-of those with SMI have a lifetime history of arrest. For the first time, a single volume takes a deep dive into the common behaviors, contexts, and decisions that lead to misdemeanor arrests.
Contributors representing the fields of anthropology, social work, criminology, and psychiatry draw on data from a mixed-method, multisite study (Atlanta, Chicago, New York, and Philadelphia) to examine how people with SMI become entangled in the criminal legal system and how failure to resolve underlying issues-such as underfunded social and mental health service systems and the shortage of affordable housing-plays a role.
Divided into three distinct sections, Entangled: How People With Serious Mental Illness Get Caught in Misdemeanor Systems
* Provides a historical perspective on how social, mental health, and criminal legal system policies have imperiled individuals with SMI and demonstrates the contexts that shape decision-making across misdemeanor systems.
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People with serious mental illness (SMI) are prominently and unjustly overrepresented in the criminal legal system. More than one-third-and in some studies more than two-thirds-of those with SMI have a lifetime history of arrest. For the first time, a single volume takes a deep dive into the common behaviors, contexts, and decisions that lead to misdemeanor arrests.
Contributors representing the fields of anthropology, social work, criminology, and psychiatry draw on data from a mixed-method, multisite study (Atlanta, Chicago, New York, and Philadelphia) to examine how people with SMI become entangled in the criminal legal system and how failure to resolve underlying issues-such as underfunded social and mental health service systems and the shortage of affordable housing-plays a role.
Divided into three distinct sections, Entangled: How People With Serious Mental Illness Get Caught in Misdemeanor Systems
* Provides a historical perspective on how social, mental health, and criminal legal system policies have imperiled individuals with SMI and demonstrates the contexts that shape decision-making across misdemeanor systems.