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August 1, 2019

"Using the ADA's 'Integration Mandate' to Disrupt Mass Incarceration"

The title of this post is the title of this new article now on SSRN authored by Robert Dinerstein and Shira Wakschlag.  Here is the abstract:

As a result of the disability rights movement's fight for the development of community-based services, the percentage of people with intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD) and mental illness living in institutions has significantly decreased over the last few decades.  However, in part because of government failure to invest properly in community-based services required for a successful transition from institutions, individuals with disabilities are now dramatically overrepresented in jails and prisons. 

The Americans with Disabilities Act's (ADA) "integration mandate" -- a principle strengthened by the Supreme Court's 1999 Olmstead v. L.C. decision, entitling individuals with disabilities to receive services in the most integrated setting appropriate to their needs -- may provide one avenue to disrupt the school-to-prison pipeline and overrepresentation of people with I/DD and mental illness in prisons and jails.  In this Article, we explore how the federal government and private parties have used--and are beginning to use in new ways -- the integration mandate to advocate for the rights of individuals with disabilities to receive the supports they need to thrive in the community and avoid unnecessary entanglement with the criminal justice system.

August 1, 2019 at 04:29 PM | Permalink

Comments

If the experience in my state is an indication all that is going to happen is swapping the prison institution to the behavioral health institution. So many people in prison go the state mental hospital's forensic unit, they are sanitized, and then released back to the streets where they are homeless because there are no services for them. They can't get jobs, they can't rent due to felony convictions, and the best possible outcome is they get on SSI and put into boarding homes when the operators steal all their money. But sooner or later most of them wind up either back in prison or back on a 30 day hold.

So what's the point? I won't extoll the virtues of prison but I won't pretend that being in forensics or on the streets is a paradise either.

Posted by: Daniel | Aug 2, 2019 2:58:22 PM

If the experience in my state is an indication all that is going to happen is swapping the prison institution to the behavioral health institution. So many people in prison go the state mental hospital's forensic unit, they are sanitized, and then released back to the streets where they are homeless because there are no services for them. They can't get jobs, they can't rent due to felony convictions, and the best possible outcome is they get on SSI and put into boarding homes when the operators steal all their money. But sooner or later most of them wind up either back in prison or back on a 30 day hold.

So what's the point? I won't extoll the virtues of prison but I won't pretend that being in forensics or on the streets is a paradise either.

Posted by: Daniel | Aug 2, 2019 2:58:22 PM

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