Volume 14 • Issue 1 • 2004
Justice and Ethics - Essay
Introduction: Justice, Ethics, and Interdisciplinary Teaching and Practice
Karen Tokarz
2004-01-01 Volume 14 • Issue 1 • 2004 • 1-14
Practicing Culturally Competent Therapeutic Jurisprudence: A Collaboration Between Social Work and Law
Carolyn Copps Hartley and Carrie J. Petrucci
2004-01-01 Volume 14 • Issue 1 • 2004 • 133-181
Promoting Social and Economic Justice Through Interdisciplinary Work in Transactional Law
Susan R. Jones
2004-01-01 Volume 14 • Issue 1 • 2004 • 249-313
Interdisciplinary Teaching and Collaboration in Higher Education: A Concept Whose Time Has Come
Anita Weinberg and Carol Harding
2004-01-01 Volume 14 • Issue 1 • 2004 • 15-48
A Law and Social Work Clinical Program for the Elderly and Disabled: Past and Future Challenges
Toby Golick and Janet Lessem
2004-01-01 Volume 14 • Issue 1 • 2004 • 183-208
Advancing Social Justice Through an Interdisciplinary Approach to Clinical Legal Education: The Case of Legal Assistance of Windsor
Rose Voyvodic and Mary Medcalf
2004-01-01 Volume 14 • Issue 1 • 2004 • 101-132
Establishing a Law and Psychiatry Clinic
Eric S. Janus and Maureen Hackett
2004-01-01 Volume 14 • Issue 1 • 2004 • 209-247
Lawyers Should Be Lawyers, But What Does That Mean?: A Response to Aiken & Wizner and Smith
Katherine R. Kruse
2004-01-01 Volume 14 • Issue 1 • 2004 • 49-100
Mental Health and the Law - Essay
The Impact of Substance Use Disorders On Women Involved in Dependency Court
Holly A. Hills, Deborah Rugs and M. Scott Young
2004-01-01 Volume 14 • Issue 1 • 2004 • 359-384
Why It Is Essential to Teach About Mental Health Issues in Criminal Law (And a Primer on How To Do It)
Richard E. Redding
2004-01-01 Volume 14 • Issue 1 • 2004 • 407-440
Capacity, Competency, and Courts: The Illinois Experience
Wenona Y. Whitfield
2004-01-01 Volume 14 • Issue 1 • 2004 • 385-406
Promises and Perils of a Psychopathology of Crime: The Troubling Case of Juvenile Psychopathy
Matthew Owen Howard, James Herbert Williams, Michael George Vaughn and Tonya Edmond
2004-01-01 Volume 14 • Issue 1 • 2004 • 441-483
The Ethical Perils of Representing the Juvenile Defendant Who May Be Incompetent
Lynda E. Frost and Adrienne E. Volenik
2004-01-01 Volume 14 • Issue 1 • 2004 • 327-358
Introduction: Mental Health and the Law
Robin Fretwell Wilson
2004-01-01 Volume 14 • Issue 1 • 2004 • 315-325
Note
The Privacy Implications of Personal Locators: Why You Should Think Twice Before Voluntarily Availing Yourself to GPS Monitoring
Waseem Karim
2004-01-01 Volume 14 • Issue 1 • 2004 • 485-515