Conferences
Calendar of Events
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3 events,
Is your Recovery Court about to be sued? The impact of the United States Department of Justice Disability Act lawsuits against treatment courts in Pennsylvania and Massachusetts.
Is your Recovery Court about to be sued? The impact of the United States Department of Justice Disability Act lawsuits against treatment courts in Pennsylvania and Massachusetts.
During this session, JSI Co-President Judge Brian MacKenzie (Ret.) will speak about the litigation undertaken by the U.S. Department of Justice and the American Civil Liberty Union against court agencies and businesses that restrict or bar the use of Medications for Opioid Use Disorder (MOUD). The conversation will cover why judges and other Recovery Court
Supervising Participants in a Mental Health Recovery Court
Supervising Participants in a Mental Health Recovery Court
JSI Consultant Gina Wilkie will cover aspects in which a Mental Health Recovery Court differs from other types of Recovery Courts, particularly in the area of supervision and engagement of the target population. The session will present an overview of the types of mental illness generally seen in the population and address how the supervision
Collaborative Case Management in Veterans’ Treatment Court
Collaborative Case Management in Veterans’ Treatment Court
All Veterans Treatment Courts (VTCs) are composed of multidisciplinary teams working towards a common goal with justice involved veterans with behavioral health issues. In most cases the teams have more than one discipline that may play some type of case management role requiring some form of a case plan. Generally, the disciplines are supervision, treatment
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6 events,
Ethical Landminds for Problem Solving Courts
Ethical Landminds for Problem Solving Courts
Honorable Brian MacKenzie (Ret.) Recovery Courts modify the role of judges and lawyers that work within them. Judges must navigate a collaborative decision-making team role. Prosecutors and defense advocates must pull back from their traditional adversarial role and learn to cooperate to enable a participant’s recovery. These and other changes in the professional roles of
Enhancing Recovery Court Team Functioning
Enhancing Recovery Court Team Functioning
Recovery courts are multidisciplinary teams working together towards common goals generally focused around enhancing public safety and supporting the recovery of justice involved populations with behavioral health issues. Outside of the Recovery court team concept, the participating disciplines have not worked in collaboration before, and consequently, teams may struggle with cohesiveness and efficiency. At this
Applying Best Practices for Supervision in a Recovery Court
Applying Best Practices for Supervision in a Recovery Court
Since the development of the treatment court model in 1989, abundant research has been conducted on the courts themselves and on the populations served in the courts. There has been specific research on factors associated with criminal conduct, criminal recidivism, and effective interventions. Research shows that treatment courts can positively impact recidivism and facilitate behavior
The Odd Couple in Treatment Courts (Prosecutor and Defense Counsel)
The Odd Couple in Treatment Courts (Prosecutor and Defense Counsel)
The prosecutor and defense counsel are important members of a treatment court’s multidisciplinary team. While serving on a treatment court team, the roles of the prosecutor and defense counsel differ from their roles in a traditional court of law. Along with embracing individual paradigm shifts, the prosecutor and defense counsel must embrace new ways of
Ethical Issues with Veteran Treatment Court Mentors?
Ethical Issues with Veteran Treatment Court Mentors?
Veterans Treatment Courts (VTC) employ volunteer mentors as regular parts of VTC teams. What are the special ethical issues for mentors and the judges involved with these courts? Are there standards that mentors should apply to their work? Co-President Judge Brian MacKenzie (Ret.) will discuss this important topic as mentors continue to demonstrate their importance