| |
November 22, 2004 A Decade in Development, Juvenile Drug Courts are Growing in Popularity, But Do They Work?
From The Urban Institute:
Since 1994, federal and state governments have invested more than a billion dollars in drug courts, specialized programs that supervise substance-abuse treatment for certain nonviolent offenders. The courts give offenders an opportunity to change their behavior and stop using illegal drugs before becoming enmeshed in the legal and penal systems. Starting in the mid-1990s, state and local jurisdictions began to establish juvenile drug courts, and by November 2003 there were 294 such courts in 46 states and the District of Columbia. Yet, without more program evaluation data, whether adult drug courts work or can be duplicated with juveniles is unclear. [View the corresponding Read more from this post.
Posted on November 22, 2004 09:52 AM |
Grassroots & Groundwork: What Communities are Doing to Get Out and Stay Out of Poverty
The Role of Medicaid and SCHIP as an Insurance Safety Net
An Overview of Selected Data on Children in Vulnerable Families
Anti-Poverty Practitioners Gear Up for Orlando Convention After Hurricane Katrina Shuts Down Their 2005 Meeting
|