Thomas J. Fagan, Ph.D., is currently an Associate Professor of Psychology and the Director of the Division of Social and Behavioral Science at Nova Southeastern University in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. For 23 years he was a psychology practitioner and administrator with the Federal Bureau of Prisons where he was an active participant in developing correctional mental health programs, creating mental health policies and procedures, and training professional, paraprofessional, and correctional staff. Dr. Fagan was also the Bureau's Chief hostage negotiator and coordinator of its crisis negotiation training program. Over the years, he has served as a consultant to numerous federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies in the areas of crisis negotiation, critical incident stress debriefing, and management of correctional mental health services and programs. Dr. Fagan has published regularly in correctional and psychological journals, has authored several book chapters, and co-edited two books with Robert K. Ax, Ph.D. -Correctional Mental Health Handbook (2003) and Corrections, Mental Health, and Social Policy: International Perspectives (2007). He also published a book on crisis negotiation in correctional settings - Negotiating Correctional Incidents: A Practical Guide (2003). Since 1997, Dr. Fagan has served as the American Psychological Association (APA)'s representative on the Board of Directors of the National Commission on Correctional Health Care (NCCHC) - a national organization dedicated to insuring quality health and mental health care to incarcerated individuals. He served as NCCHC's Board Chair from 2002 - 2003. He is a Fellow in APA's Divisions 12 and 18. Division 18 recognized his work in correctional mental health with a special achievement award in 1993 and he received APA's Award for Distinguished Contributions to Practice in the Public Sector in 2006. He received is Bachelor's degree from Rutgers University and his Master's and Doctoral Degrees from Virginia Tech. Robert K. Ax, Ph.D., received his doctorate in clinical psychology from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, and practiced in state and federal corrections for more than 20 years. He is a licensed clinical psychologist (Virginia), a Fellow of the American Psychological Association (APA), a member of the Canadian Psychological Association (CPA), and a former President of the APA Division of Psychologists in Public Service (18). He has twice been the recipient of Division 18's Distinguished Service Award, and in 2009 received its highest honor, the Harold Hildreth Award. He was the training director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons' first APA-accredited internship program at the Federal Correctional Institution, Petersburg, Virginia. Dr. Ax is the co-editor, with Dr. Thomas J. Fagan, of two previous volumes, the Correctional Mental Health Handbook, published by Sage in 2003, and Corrections, Mental Health and Social Policy: International Perspectives (Charles C Thomas, 2007). He has published articles on mental health training and correctional issues, currently serves on the editorial board of the journal Criminal Justice and Behavior, and has served as an invited reviewer for other journals, including American Psychologist, Psychological Services, and Professional Psychology: Research and Practice. Dr. Ax has published several articles on organized psychology's prescriptive authority initiative as well. He delivered an invited address on this issue at the annual CPA convention in 2008, and served as a content expert (1998-1999) for the development of the APA College of Professional Psychology's Psychopharmacology Examination for Psychologists. Dr. Ax received the American Society for the Advancement of Pharmacotherapy's (APA's Division 55) National Leadership Award in 2006.
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SECTION ONE: CORRECTIONAL PRACTICE: INTRODUCTION AND FOUNDATION 1. Criminal Justice and Mental Health Systems: The New Continuum of Care System - Thomas Fagan, Dyona Augustin 2. Comparison of Correctional and Community Mental Health Service Delivery Models - Robert Powitzky 3. Managing the Mentally Ill from a Correctional Administrator's Perspective - Peter M. Carlson SECTION TWO: ENTERING CORRECTIONAL PRACTICE 4. Clinical Assessment in Correctional Settings - Daryl G. Kroner, Jeremy F. Mills, Andrew Gray and Kelly O. N. Talbert 5. Correctional Treatment - Donald A. Sawyer, Catherine Moffitt 6. Issues in Multicultural Correctional Assessment and Treatment - Corinne N. Ortega 7. Clinical Psychopharmacology in Correctional Settings - Gollapudi S. Shankar 8. Interdisciplinary Collaboration in Correctional Practice - Dean Aufderheide and John D. Baxter SECTION THREE: WORKING WITH SPECIAL POPULATIONS 9. Offenders with Severe and Persistent Mental Illness - Rebecca L. Bauer, Robert D. Morgan and Jon T. Mandracchia 10. Mental Health Needs of Female Offenders - Ann Booker Loper and Lacey Levitt 11. Substance Abuse and Co-occurring Disorders among Criminal Offenders - David J. Stephens 12. Assessment and Treatment of Incarcerated Sex Offenders - Shelia M. Brandt and Michael Thompson 13. Juvenile Offenders - Debra DePrato and Stephen W. Phillippi 14. Managing Disruptive Offenders: A Behavioral Perspective - Steven J. Helfand 15. Understanding the Broad Corrections Environment: Responding to the Needs of Diverse Inmates - Alix M. McLearen and Phillip R. Magaletta SECTION FOUR: THE FUTURE OF CORRECTIONAL MENTAL HEALTH PRACTICE 16. Correctional Mental Health: A Best Practices Future - Robert K. Ax
"The book is not only a contribution to the academic community for students in psychology, sociology, criminal justice, and correctional counseling at any level, it will also have practical use for correctional practitioners at the entry level, as well as for those with more experience. For the practitioner, it will serve as a quick-reference guide and resource highlighting current correctional mental problems and workable solutions in American correctional settings. As an add-on benefit, the book provides correctional administrators with a wide selection of readings to help them broaden their understanding of current correctional mental health practice." -- Dr. Robert Smith "Fagan and Ax provide a compelling clinical guide for correctional mental health treatment based on a biopsychosocial or intersystemic theory that is grounded in research and clinical practice. The book draws on the wealth of clinical and administrative experiences of the editors and contributors." -- Dr. Robert Smith "The book's editors and contributors represent an established and distinguished group, not only of correctional mental health professionals and administrators from federal, state, and local levels, but academics and others in the field who have provided significant and distinguished scholarly contributions." -- Dr. Robert Smith "Within 15 minutes of opening Correctional Mental Health: From Theory to Best Practice, I found that I had in my hands not only an indispensible basic text for the current era of correctional professionals but also one that represents a quantum leap in the consolidation of essential correctional knowledge." -- Dr. J. Tyler Carpenter * PsycCRITIQUES *