| [NT 15003449]: |
Introduction. -- SECTION I: POLICY AND PRACTICE AT THE INTERSECTION OF MENTAL HEALTH AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE. -- Chapter 1: Criminal Justice Liaison and Diversion: An assessment of policy in practice, Jo Wells, Bournemouth University. -- Chapter 2: "A complete gamechanger": the direct impact of COVID-19 on the policing response to 'vulnerability', Laura Briody, Sam Weston (Keele University), Sandra Walklate (University Of Liverpool). -- Chapter 3: The Philosophies and Models of Prison Mental Healthcare in England & Wales: outside inside. Wendy Dyer (Northumbria University). -- Chapter 4: The Need for Practicable Normative Rights-Based Practice in Secure and Forensic Mental Health Services. Sarah Markham (Kings College London). -- Chapter 5: Processes of institutionalization and exclusion of mentally ill offenders. The Italian case. Daniela Ronco And Giovanni Torrente (University Of Torino). -- Chapter 6: Controlling or Caring? Theories and practices of (neo)institutionalization into a deinstitutionalised country. Perla Arianna Allegri and Michele Miravalle (University of Torino). -- Chapter 7: The Penrose Hypothesis and the era of mass incarceration. Ian Cummins (University Of Salford). -- Chapter 8: The Offender Personality Disorder (OPD) Pathway in England and Wales: Progress, politics, and parole. Julie Trebilcock (Brunel University London). -- SECTION II: MENTAL HEALTH AS AN UNFOLDING DIMENSION OF SOCIAL HARM: THE GOVERNANCE OF 'PROBLEMATISED' POPULATIONS. -- Chapter 9: Challenging the governance paradigm for Women's mental health: from risk to resilience. Rebecca Gomm (University of Roehampton). -- Chapter 10: The military as a continuation site of social harm. Hannah Wilkinson, University of Nottingham. -- Chapter 11: Tainted Police Officers, Mental Health and Occupational Hesitancy. John McDaniel (University of Wolverhampton). -- Chapter 12: Mental health, criminal records and disclosure. Andrew Henley (University of Nottingham). -- Chapter 13: Exploring the boundary between harm and criminalization of behaviours in the digital world. Lauren Doyle (University of Sunderland). -- Chapter 14: 'If I wasn't on drugs or I didn't take anything, I wouldn't be here. They make me feel that fucking bad': An exploration of the everyday lives of people who use drugs coping with stigma as social harm. Michelle Addison (Durham University). -- Chapter 15: Watching, Waiting, and Wondering: Re-examining the link between Autism Spectrum Disorder and Violence. Helena Gosling, Tracie Hamel, Janet Jamieson and William McGowan (Liverpool John Moores University). -- Chapter 16: Terrorism, Radicalisation and Mental Health: Unravelling the connections and illuminating the contradictions. Samantha Weston (Keel University) and Gabe Mythen (University of Liverpool). -- Conclusion: Understanding mental health through the lens of social harm and justice. |