University Press of America
Pages: 410
Trim: 7½ x 10½
978-0-7618-4732-8 • Hardback • December 2010 • $126.00 • (£97.00)
978-0-7618-4733-5 • Paperback • July 2009 • $70.99 • (£55.00)
978-0-7618-4734-2 • eBook • July 2009 • $67.00 • (£52.00)
George C. Klein, Ph.D., is professor of sociology and anthropology at Oakton Community College in Des Plaines, Illinois. He has served as a part-time police officer, is a trained hostage negotiator, and has served as a consultant to a SWAT team. He is also a consultant to the Behavioral Science Unit at the FBI Academy. Dr. Klein has written articles on mental health, criminal justice, hostage negotiation, and terrorism. His first book was The Adventure: The Quest for My Romanian Babies (Hamilton Books, 2007).
Chapter 1 Preface: The Politics of Mental Health
Chapter 2 Part I: Theory
Part 3 Chapter 1: Congeneric Analysis: On the Emergence of an "Accidental" Methodology
Chapter 4 Part II. The Court
Part 5 Chapter 2: The Mental Health Court: The Beginning
Chapter 6 Part III. Studying Down
Part 7 Chapter 3: Admissions: "I Don't Reject Anybody...I'm Protecting Myself"
Part 8 Chapter 4: The Police: "How Do You Talk A Mentally Ill Person Out of Being Mentally Ill?
Chapter 9 Part IV. Studying Up: The Illinois Department of Mental Health and The Illinois State Legislature and the Governor's Office
Part 10 Chapter 5: The Illinois Department of Mental Health: The Mental Health System?
Part 11 Chapter 6: The Legislature and the Governor: Battling the Alligators
Chapter 12 Part V. Conclusions
Part 13 Chapter 7: Conclusions: The Passing of the Asylum; The End of the Exploration
Chapter 14 Appendix: The Courts: A Dead End
Chapter 15 Index
Chapter 16 About the Author
As a result of the massive amount of information collected and discussed, Klein's book provides a sustained - and very thorough - examination of an important, under-studied, and growing problem in the United States…. Klein's book provides an invaluable study of the mental health and criminal justice systems and the treatment of mentally ill individuals in Chicago, and has important implications for social policy across the United States. The review of deinstitutionalization, the literature on criminalization of mental illness, and the overview of historical issues in involuntary civil commitment are all impressive and must-reads for those wanting to learn about the historical development of mental health treatment in the mental health and criminal justice systems. I would recommend this book for a variety of advanced undergraduate or graduate-level courses.
— Contemporary Sociology