Collins employed cost-benefit methods to estimate the economic costs and benefits associated with the provision of substance abuse treatment in Idaho. To lend context to the cost-benefit findings, his work illustrated utilizes theoretical concepts from the fields of public policy and criminal justice/criminology. Specifically, he details the impact that the network, collaborative capacity, and wicked problem concepts have on the criminal justice and substance abuse treatment fields. His findings indicate a positive relationship between collaborative capacity and social support and an inverse r.
Contents
Sizing up substance abuse and treatment issues : the importance of collaborative efforts -- Theoretical framework : intersection of policy and practice -- Mapping the cost-benefit, collaborative capacity, and social support nexus -- Cost-benefit findings and collaborative capacity survey results -- Managing wicked problems.
Local Note
eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America