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Trial by Treatment

Punishing Illness in an Age of Criminal Legal Reform

Trial by Treatment

Punishing Illness in an Age of Criminal Legal Reform

A troubling account of the unexpected impacts of treatment-based alternatives to criminal punishment.

Every year, courts send hundreds of thousands of people to treatment-based programs as alternatives to traditional punishment. These alternatives—known as ‘diversion programs’—are widely celebrated as reforms that reduce the punishment of the mentally ill. But in Trial by Treatment, Mary Ellen Stitt shows that they have, in fact, expanded the reach of the criminal legal system and its power over the lives of the most vulnerable.

The inner workings of diversion programs are obscure, partially by design, and data on outcomes is hard to come by. Stitt draws on two years of fieldwork in criminal courtrooms and court-mandated treatment sessions, as well as an original national dataset, in-depth interviews, and experimental survey data, to document the hidden impacts of diversion. She shows that placing mental healthcare under the control of the courts has helped to legitimize the criminalization of illness, warped treatment environments, and amplified inequalities in punishment. In vivid and humanizing detail, Trial by Treatment shows how reforms that keep power and discretion in the same hands can entrench the very problems they promised to solve.


256 pages | 3 halftones, 9 tables | 6 x 9 | © 2025

Law and Legal Studies: Law and Society

Sociology: Criminology, Delinquency, Social Control, Race, Ethnic, and Minority Relations

Reviews

“Drawing on a rich amount of data, Trial by Treatment powerfully demonstrates how court-mandated diversion cannot solve—and can even worsen—the problems of mental illness and substance use disorders. A timely reminder that reforms must get at the root of the problem lest they risk entrenching punishment and inequality."

Matthew Clair | author of "Privilege and Punishment"

Trial by Treatment is a devastatingly vivid account of the criminal diversion reform movement, situated in the wake of mass incarceration and the implosion of U.S. mental healthcare. Using an incredibly wide array of data on how these proliferating programs function, Stitt reveals how this dispersed alternative approach further entangles vulnerable people within the criminal legal system and entrenches punitiveness in the management of social ills.”

Mona Lynch | University of California, Irvine

Table of Contents

Introduction: Punishing Illness

Part I: Legitimation
Chapter One: Rescuing Legitimacy: Treatment-Based Reforms in the Criminal Legal System
Chapter Two: Extending Control: Diversion and the Interventionist Courtroom

Part II: Assimilation
Chapter Three: Managing Risk: The Design of Mandated Care
Chapter Four: Coercing Care: Therapist-Enforcers and Client-Defendants in the Therapeutic Space

Part III: Obfuscation
Chapter Five: Sorting People: Adjudication by Social Structure
Chapter Six: Punishing Treatment: The Costs of Diversion

Conclusion

Acknowledgments
Methodological Appendix A
Methodological Appendix B
Methodological Appendix C
Notes
Index

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