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  2. Rockhaven Sanitarium Historic District - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rockhaven_Sanitarium...

    Rockhaven is one of the best examples of an early twentieth-century woman-owned, women-serving private sanitarium in California, and was one of the first of its type in the nation. It reflects the vision of founder Agnes Richards , R.N., and represents a small, yet significant movement that sought to improve the conditions of mentally ill women ...

  3. Dying To Be Free - The Huffington Post

    projects.huffingtonpost.com/dying-to-be-free...

    Like Kalfas, he has pushed area doctors and state officials to embrace this medical model. Because his pleas have gone ignored, he has a waiting list of about 100 addicts hoping to get on the medication. One of his patients, a woman in her mid-50s, had a son who was being treated at Grateful Life, a program that she didn’t quite trust.

  4. Moral treatment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_treatment

    Moral treatment was an approach to mental disorder based on humane psychosocial care or moral discipline that emerged in the 18th century and came to the fore for much of the 19th century, deriving partly from psychiatry or psychology and partly from religious or moral concerns.

  5. Restorative justice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Restorative_justice

    Restorative justice is an approach to justice that aims to repair the harm done to victims. [1] [2] In doing so, practitioners work to ensure that offenders take responsibility for their actions, to understand the harm they have caused, to give them an opportunity to redeem themselves, and to discourage them from causing further harm.

  6. Victims' rights - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victims'_rights

    Examples include the right to restitution, the right to a victims' advocate, and the right not to be excluded from criminal justice proceedings. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] A key principle underlying victims' rights is the need to avoid secondary victimisation in their implementation particularly when victims' are called to take a role in criminal justice ...

  7. Transformative justice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transformative_justice

    Transformative justice is distinguishable from restorative justice in that transformative justice places emphasis on addressing and repairing harm outside of the state. [12] adrienne maree brown uses the example of a person who has stolen money in order to buy food to sustain themselves, writing that “if the racialized system of capitalism has produced such inequality that someone who is ...

  8. Psychiatric survivors movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychiatric_survivors_movement

    In 1922, ex-patient Rachel Grant-Smith added to calls for reform of the system of neglect and abuse she had suffered by publishing "The Experiences of an Asylum Patient". [ 13 ] We Are Not Alone (WANA) was founded by a group of patients at Rockland State Hospital in New York (now the Rockland Psychiatric Center) in the mid to late 1940s, and ...

  9. Hawaii's new corrections department aims to give inmates a ...

    www.aol.com/hawaiis-corrections-department-aims...

    Jan. 5—The newly re-designated state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation says that with 95 % of incarcerated people who come into the state's prison system eventually being released ...