Open Society and Soros Foundation
about usinitiativesgrants and scholarshipsresource centernewsroom
Publications
image

America’s Problem-Solving Courts

The Criminal Costs of Treatment and the Case for Reform

Date:
September 2009
Source:
National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers

The debate over drug enforcement policy in the United States is almost always framed in stark terms premised on narrow options. Conventional thinking about criminal justice issues—prison, community corrections, probation, or possibly some sort of diversion program for minor offenses and first-time offenders—has not worked, nor has it abated the addiction problem. Drug courts have swept the nation without much debate or input from the criminal defense bar. That input is long overdue.

This OSI-supported report seeks to redefine the debate by challenging the fundamental criminal justice lens through which drug-related issues are evaluated. Because "the definition of the alternatives is the supreme instrument of power," accepting the criminal justice paradigm legitimizes drugs courts while ignoring other smart, fair, effective, and economical approaches.

The report also summarizes the history and evolution of drug courts, evaluates their operation and effectiveness, makes an overarching recommendation on the treatment of addiction, and offers a number of recommendations to ensure that the procedures and practices in drug court comply with constitutional and ethical norms.

back to the top of the page
share  print  print
Related Information

Celebrating 30 Years of Grassroots Leadership
OSI-New York
March 10, 2010
Speakers at this event will reflect upon the organization's decades of work as a multiracial community organizing effort focusing on ending private prisons and immigrant family detention.

Soros Justice Fellow Named "CNN Hero"
February 19, 2010
video VIDEO  
Soros Justice Fellow Susan Burton is founder of a grassroots, nonprofit home for formerly incarcerated women in South Los Angeles.

One Year and Counting: When and How Will Guantánamo Close?
New York City
January 22, 2010
This panel, sponsored by the Open Society Institute, the Consitution Project, and the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, marks President Obama's self-imposed deadline for closing the Guantánamo Bay detention facility.

About Us  |  Initiatives  |  Grants, Scholarships & Fellowships  |  Resource Center  |  Newsroom  |  Site Map  |  About this Site  |  Contact


Creative Commons License
Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative License.
©2010 Open Society Institute. Some rights reserved.