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CUP book

Mental Health and Criminal Justice: A New Zealand guide

11 June 2025

Edited by Marozane Spamers

HOW TO APPLY

Forthcoming
July 2025
Open Access, PDF
270pp
A4
滨厂叠狈听978-1-98-850348-6

Mental health is an urgent and growing concern within the criminal justice system. The high prevalence of mental health concerns among those interacting with the criminal justice system highlights the significance and urgency of developing and implementing evidence-based, informed and culturally competent mental health-related policy.

This is the first book in Aotearoa New Zealand that focuses on mental health policy and legislation at different stages of the criminal justice process. Bridging academic insight and practical application, the book takes a critical, rights-based and multidisciplinary approach, engaging with law, criminology, psychology and psychiatry, and public health to explore the realities of how mental health intersects with justice in policy, practice and lived experience.

Chapters 1 to 5 frame the topic of mental health in criminal justice by contextualising mental health and criminal justice in New Zealand in light of its history of mental health care, and discussing M膩ori understandings of mental health and criminal justice, the role of criminological theories of crime, the philosophy of punishment and human rights considerations. Chapters 6 to 10 discuss mental health as it relates to discrete aspects of the criminal justice system 鈥 namely police, the criminal trial process, criminal law, expert evidence and prisons. Chapter 11 covers the mental health of victims, while Chapter 12 focuses on the mental health of criminal justice professionals. Lastly, Chapter 13 discusses current developments and future directions in mental health and criminal justice in New Zealand.

The book is aimed at third year and postgraduate students and will appeal to students of criminal justice, law, sociology, criminology, psychology and psychiatry. It will also be a valuable resource for people working in the mental health and criminal justice space, including lawyers, policy makers, forensic experts, corrections, police, victim advocacy services, citizens advice, mental health services and other related parties or organisations 鈥 as well as anyone navigating the criminal justice system.

Marozane Spamers is a lecturer in law and criminal justice in the Faculty of Law 鈥 Te Kaupeka Ture at the University of 91视频污污 鈥 Te Whare W膩nanga o Waitaha, Aotearoa New Zealand. Marozane鈥檚 research interests are in mental health and criminal justice, drawing on criminal law, criminology and human rights law. She takes a multidisciplinary approach to research, based on the view that law does not operate in a vacuum and that the legitimacy of the criminal justice system can only be ensured if legislation and policy are evidence based. She is particularly invested in determining how criminal law and criminal justice policy can be used to protect the human rights of people with mental health concerns while achieving the goals of the criminal justice system. Marozane holds an LLB, an LLM in criminal law and an LLD in mental health law from the University of Pretoria, South Africa, as well as an MPhil in criminological research from the University of Cambridge, United Kingdom.

Contributors:聽Bethany Growns,聽Jessica Niurangi Maclean,聽James Mehigan,聽Linda Mussell,聽Robin Palmer,聽Jayson Ware and聽Debra Wilson.

Published with assistance from the Michael and Suzanne Borrin Foundation.

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