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Police Response to Mental Health Calls for Service
Gatekeepers and Street Corner Psychiatrists
Police Response to Mental Health Calls for Service
Gatekeepers and Street Corner Psychiatrists
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Description
Police Response to Mental Health Calls for Service: Gatekeepers and Street Corner Psychiatrists focuses on closing the gap in literature surrounding police responses to mental health calls for service, with an emphasis on the effect of training and relationships with mental health agencies, in order to better understand the interaction between police officers and individuals with mental health diagnoses. Kayla G. Jachimowski and Jonathon A. Cooper pay close attention to Crisis Intervention Training (CIT) and its impact on how police officers would respond to these calls for service, also examining how the relationships between police, the community, and mental health service providers impact police response. Jachimowski and Cooper argue for the importance of police training about mental health disorders and explore the likelihood of diverting individuals with mental illness from the criminal justice system. Scholars of criminology, sociology, and psychology will find this book particularly useful.
Table of Contents
Part 1: Policing and Mental Health Calls for Service
Chapter 1: An Introduction to the Problem
Chapter 2: Understanding Mental Health: A Brief History American Practice
Chapter 3: Mental Health's Implications for Policing
Part 2: State of Policing and Mental Health Calls for Service
Chapter 4: Police Training - General Patterns Related to CIT
Chapter 5: Police Training - A More Detailed Look
Chapter 6: Moving Forward: Theory and Practice
Appendix A: How We Gathered our Data
Appendix B: Survey Instruments
Appendix C: Vignette Universe
References
About the Authors
Index
Product details
| Published | Nov 05 2020 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 130 |
| ISBN | 9781793601735 |
| Imprint | Lexington Books |
| Illustrations | 25 b/w illustrations; |
| Series | Policing Perspectives and Challenges in the Twenty-First Century |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Divided into two parts, this book looks at how crisis intervention training (CIT) affects police officers’ responses to mental health calls for service. Part 1 provides a historical overview of mental health in the US, explaining how psychiatric deinstitutionalization and, concomitantly, the criminalization of people with mental illness became a policing problem.... Part 2 focuses on how, in their research, the authors found that CIT did not significantly affect how duly sworn law enforcement officers and police academy cadets hypothetically responded to mental health calls for service. Undeterred by their findings, the authors conclude that CIT can nonetheless have an idiosyncratic impact on individual officers, and they encourage future research in this direction. Recommended.
Choice Reviews
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