If you focus on the factors that bring people before them, courts can play a significant role in creating long-term reductions in crime, writes Paul Jenkins, CEO Rethink Mental Illness
On the launch of our new report we address some of the questions that arise from using courts as windows of opportunity to reduce crime.
Recent research shows that perceptions of fairness are more significant in shaping public attitudes of the justice system than perceptions of effectiveness.
Cuts to legal aid can affect perceptions of fairness at court, writes our guest blogger and lawyer Dan Breger.
Whether London or New York court users face the same frustrations and delays, Phil Bowen explores how we can use fairness to address these issues.
The Center for Court Innovation's Greg Berman reflects on transatlantic working and how brilliant strategic planning is no more than a series of serendipitous encounters.
Greg Berman and Aubrey Fox of the Center for Court Innovation discuss Red Hook Community Justice Centre and what lessons it might bring to similar efforts in the UK.
Guest blogger Rob Allen explores how problem-solving approaches work at Newark Community Solutions
West London Drug Court, which ran from 2007 to 2013 at Hammersmith Magistrates Court was a pioneering project which sought to establish a problem-solving court, which combines punishment with help, within a normal English magistrates’ court. This briefing looks at it's work.
The Lord Chief justice encourages innovative thinking: "innovation and change are not merely an option but they are a necessity".