Littérature scientifique sur le sujet « Family Court (Cook County) »

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Articles de revues sur le sujet "Family Court (Cook County)"

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Eife, Erin, et Beth E. Richie. « Punishment by Association : The Burden of Attending Court for Legal Bystanders ». Law & ; Social Inquiry 47, no 2 (9 décembre 2021) : 584–606. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/lsi.2021.43.

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Scholars have shown how legal bystanders experience punishment at the hands of the state in their homes and neighborhoods, as well as jails and prisons. Other scholars have shown how bureaucratic processes, such as attending court, are punitive toward people charged with crimes. There is less information about how legal bystanders also experience punishment in courtrooms. In this article, we bridge the literatures between secondary prisonization and procedural punishment to illustrate how legal bystanders, such as family and friends of bond court defendants, experience punishment when attending bond court. We utilize courtroom ethnography of Central Bond Court in Chicago’s Cook County and interviews with family and friends of people charged with a crime to illustrate this form of punishment in three themes: extraction, destabilization, and degradation. With these findings, we argue that secondary prisonization begins not at the point of incarceration, but at the moment a loved one’s contact with the criminal legal system begins.
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Tanenhaus, David S. « Growing Up Dependent : Family Preservation in Early Twentieth-Century Chicago ». Law and History Review 19, no 3 (2001) : 547–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/744273.

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On December 23, 1912, a Hungarian father brought his three young daughters (ages three, five, and seven) to the Cook County Juvenile Court to file dependent petitions on their behalf. He alleged that their mother had deserted the family, stolen their savings, and disappeared. As a single father, he could have and probably did argue that it was unreasonable to expect him to work and to raise his young children simultaneously. On Christmas Eve, after a six-man jury found each girl to be a “dependent child,” Judge Merritt Pinckney ordered them committed to the Lisle Industrial School and arranged for their father to pay $15 a month for their support. Thus, the single father had used the juvenile court to arrange for a private institution to raise his now motherless children, who because they were the same gender were at least allowed to grow up together in the same industrial school.
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Anonymous. « Cook County Introduces Mental Health Court ». Psychiatric Annals 34, no 6 (juin 2004) : 432. http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/0048-5713-20040601-11.

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Bensinger, Gad J. « The Juvenile Court of Cook County : Past, Present and Future ». Journal of Crime and Justice 13, no 2 (janvier 1990) : 105–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0735648x.1990.9721416.

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Bryant, Diana. « A Conversation with the Chief Justice of the Family Court ». Victoria University Law and Justice Journal 7, no 1 (11 juin 2018) : 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.15209/vulj.v7i1.1130.

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VULJ Editors Niko Kordos, Hannah Cook-Tonkin, Josh Gibson and Angela Stanley interviewed the Chief Justice of the Family Court of Australia, her Honour Diana Bryant AO, on 25 September 2017 at the Family Court in Melbourne.
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Wang, Chen Y., Melissa L. Palma, Christine Haley, Jeff Watts et Keiki Hinami. « Rapid Creation of a Multiagency Alternate Care Site for COVID-19– Positive Individuals Experiencing Homelessness ». American Journal of Public Health 111, no 7 (juillet 2021) : 1227–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.2105/ajph.2021.306286.

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Cook County Health partnered with the Chicago Departments of Public Health and Family & Support Services and several dozen community-based organizations to rapidly establish a temporary medical respite shelter during the spring 2020 COVID-19 peak for individuals experiencing homelessness in Chicago and Cook County, Illinois. This program provided low-barrier isolation housing to medically complex adults until their safe return to congregate settings. We describe strategies used by the health care agency, which is not a Health Resource and Services Administration Health Care for the Homeless grantee, to provide medical services and care coordination.
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Dodge, L. Mara. « "Our Juvenile Court Has Become More like a Criminal Court" : A Century of Reform at the Cook County (Chicago) Juvenile Court ». Michigan Historical Review 26, no 2 (2000) : 51. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/20173859.

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Chriqui, Jamie F., Christina N. Sansone et Lisa M. Powell. « The Sweetened Beverage Tax in Cook County, Illinois : Lessons From a Failed Effort ». American Journal of Public Health 110, no 7 (juillet 2020) : 1009–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.2105/ajph.2020.305640.

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Objectives. To describe the public health and policy lessons learned from the failure of the Cook County, Illinois, Sweetened Beverage Tax (SBT). Methods. This retrospective, mixed-methods, qualitative study involved key informant (KI) and discussion group interviews and document analysis including news media, court documents, testimony, letters, and press releases. Two coders used Atlas.ti v.8A to analyze 321 documents (from September 2016 through December 2017) and 6 KI and discussion group transcripts (from December 2017 through August 2018). Results. Key lessons were (1) the SBT process needed to be treated as a political campaign, (2) there was inconsistent messaging regarding the tax purpose (i.e., revenue vs public health), (3) it was important to understand the local context and constraints, (4) there was implementation confusion, and (5) the media influenced an antitax backlash. Conclusions. The experience with the implementation and repeal of the Cook County SBT provides important lessons for future beverage tax efforts. Public Health Implications. Beverage taxation efforts need to be treated as political campaigns requiring strong coalitions, clear messaging, substantial resources, and work within the local context.
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Tiktin, Stephen N., et Ernest J. Mazorol. « FAMILY COURT COORDINATION OF HUMAN SERVICES, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON ». Family Court Review 35, no 3 (15 mars 2005) : 342–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.174-1617.1997.tb00475.x.

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Cossyleon, Jennifer, John Orwat, Christine George, Don Stemen et Whitney Key. « Deferring felony prosecution : a process evaluation of an innovative Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office program ». Journal of Criminological Research, Policy and Practice 3, no 4 (4 décembre 2017) : 261–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jcrpp-01-2017-0003.

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Purpose The Cook County State Attorneys’ Deferred Prosecution Program (DPP) is a pre-trial diversionary program that accepts first-time, non-violent defendants charged with a felony crime. The purpose of this paper is to document the development, implementation, and program patterns of the DPP to better understand the program’s scope and reach in diverting defendants from traditional criminal prosecution. Design/methodology/approach The approach to evaluating Cook County’s DPP is primarily qualitative. Through interviews with program administrators and current and former participants, the authors document the process of creating and implementing such DPP that aims to avoid a felony conviction altogether. The authors provide program participant patterns to shed light on the program’s scope and reach in diverting defendants from traditional felony prosecution. Findings Using data from staff, administrators, and program participants, the authors found that the DPP was developed and implemented through supportive leadership who instilled a culture of collaboration and buy-in. Expanding the program could include increasing the capacity of DPP to include additional participants or having a DPP incorporated into each branch court, instead of the centralized system under which it currently operates. Increasing the capacity and scope of the program could both further decrease criminal court caseloads and most importantly avoid a higher number of stigmatizing felony convictions for first-time non-violent defendants. Practical implications DPPs are cost effective and can be easily implemented within existing systems. Collaboration and buy-in from all stakeholders are crucial to the program’s success. DPP offers opportunities for expansion. Increasing the capacity and scope of the program could both further decrease criminal court caseloads and most importantly avoid a higher number of stigmatizing felony convictions for first-time non-violent felony defendants. Originality/value The main goals of DPP were two-fold. The first was to minimize the level of resources allocated for non-violent offenders in the criminal justice system by diverting such defendants out of the criminal justice system early in the process and reducing the recidivism rates of program participants. The second aimed to provide an option for eligible defendants to avoid a felony conviction, thereby avoiding the collateral consequences associating with a felony conviction.
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Thèses sur le sujet "Family Court (Cook County)"

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Lomeli, Esmeralda. « Perceptions of an emerging family drug court program among child welfare and family drug court professional in Riverside County ». CSUSB ScholarWorks, 2004. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/2715.

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This study examined the perceptions of child welfare and family drug court professionals regarding the emerging family drug court program in Riverside County. The following were addressed: what are the strengths of the program, what are challenges or barriers in the program, how do others not involved in the program feel about the program, how the need for the program was recognized, and how child welfare professionals view the future of the program.
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McMillin, Heidee Eileen. « Process and outcome evaluation of the Spokane County meth family treatment court, 2003-2005 ». Online access for everyone, 2007. http://www.dissertations.wsu.edu/Dissertations/Fall2007/h_mcmillin_120307.pdf.

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Samady, Lila Massoumi. « Evaluation of the family nurturing program : The family education component of the Riverside County Dependency Recovery Drug Court Program ». CSUSB ScholarWorks, 2005. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/2876.

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Stoutt, Stacie T. « A process evaluation of the recovery process among Fulton County family drug court program participants ». DigitalCommons@Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center, 2005. http://digitalcommons.auctr.edu/dissertations/1844.

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This study evaluates the Fulton County Juvenile Court's Family Drug Court Program (FDC). The program was established under an initiative to provide substance abusing mothers a chance through recovery from the disease of chemical dependence. Specifically, this evaluation examines participants' perceptions of their recovery process and implications for maintaining sobriety. Sobriety is measured by the participating mothers' perception of the interventions and sanctions provided to them during each phase of their recovery process. A sample of adult files (N=20) were drawn from the FDC program. Demographic and other data were collected from the courts Juvenile Court Automated Tracking System (JCATS). The frequency distributions of positive and negative responses were examined. The researcher found that overall, interventions provided by the Futon County Juvenile's Family Drug Court program demonstrated a positive impact on participating mothers' ability to maintain sobriety. Symbolic Interaction theory explains the use of Social Work skills through family preservation. This theory is used to assess the efficacy of the Family Drug Court's process. The results of this study can be used to improve the services offered by the Family Drug Court team and ultimately reduce relapse rates. It is this study's intent to inform program administrators of how recovery is perceived by their clients.
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Vreeken, Marcia Marie. « Child abuse factors which influence social workers' recommendations to the court to sustain a petition of child abuse ». CSUSB ScholarWorks, 1996. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/1171.

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Caldero, Rose. « Domestic Violence : The Need for Integrated and Specialized Courts in the Ninth Judical Circuit of Orange and Osceola County, Florida ». Honors in the Major Thesis, University of Central Florida, 2014. http://digital.library.ucf.edu/cdm/ref/collection/ETH/id/1585.

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Over the last 30 years, the justice system has increased attention toward domestic violence. In many states, the emphasis has emerged to a specialization, separate dockets and specially trained judges (Center for Court Innovation 2009). Domestic violence courts have evolved, however the Ninth Circuit Court in Orange and Osceola County has yet to adopt this concept. At present, the Osceola County Courthouse utilizes the Unified Family Court (UFC), an integrated comprehensive approach which handles all cases simultaneously addressing the families involved in disputes, as well as the adults and the children of domestic violence. The Orange County Courthouse on the other hand, has the court rooms on one designated floor of the Orange County Courthouse which is dedicated to domestic relation’s cases. There are (3) specialized judges for domestic violence cases which rotate every (6) months. This thesis will explore the different challenges that are faced by the judicial system in domestic violence courts in Orange and Osceola County. One of those challenges is that there is no set “model” to develop a consistency in practices and policies; therefore there is no mutual understanding or agreement for the purposed outcome. With the study of case law, statutes, court research, court observation, and goal assessments, this thesis will explore the possibilities of change in this court system. The purpose of this study is to contribute awareness, present recommendations to the legal system, and state that it is not enough -although critical- to focus on the victim’s safety and the offender accountability, but also it is crucial to place an emphasis on specially trained judges and stakeholders in order to create a more unified structure.
B.S.
Bachelors
Legal Studies
Health and Public Affairs
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Cannavo, Joanne M. « Evaluation of the Erie County Family Treatment Court ». 2007. http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1397907691&sid=1&Fmt=2&clientId=39334&RQT=309&VName=PQD.

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Thesis (Ph.D.)--State University of New York at Buffalo, 2007.
Title from PDF title page (viewed on Feb 14, 2008) Available through UMI ProQuest Digital Dissertations. Thesis adviser: Doueck, Howard J. Includes bibliographical references.
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Livres sur le sujet "Family Court (Cook County)"

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Society, Chicago Genealogical, dir. Probate court records, Cook County, Illinois, 1872-1873. Chicago : Chicago Genealogical Society, 1992.

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United States. Bureau of Justice Assistance. et American Bar Association. Section of Criminal Justice., dir. Drug night courts : The Cook County experience. Washington, D.C : The Bureau, 1994.

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E, Presley Leister. White County, Arkansas : County court record 1836-1847 ; and, Collected information on Samuel Guthrie, his friends and relatives, the makers of White County. Searcy, Ark. (1708 W. Center, Searcy 72143) : C. Presley, 1986.

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Rutherford, Dolores Crumrine. Goochland County, Virginia, court orders, 1728-1805 : Page family. Carmichael, CA : D.C. Rutherford, 1993.

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Britain, Great. Family Proceedings Supreme Court County Courts : The Family Proceedings Rules (Northern Ireland) 1996. Belfast : HMSO, 1996.

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Morris, Charles E. John A. Morris &c : Some Meade County Circuit Court suits. Cadiz, Ky. (1029 Grigsby Lane, Cadiz 42211) : C.E. Morris, 1992.

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Peden, Henry C. Harford County, Maryland, marriage references and family relationships, 1774-1824. Lewes, Del : Colonial Roots, 2011.

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Kaluzny, Kathryn J. The court report : A year of King County family law decisions. Renton, WA (P.O. Box 2213, Renton 98056) : By-the-Stream Pub., 1994.

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Britain, Great. Family proceedings supreme court of England and Wales county courts : The family proceedings rules 1991. London : HMSO, 1991.

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Hurst, Hunter. Lorain County (OH) Family Court Pilot Project : Processing of children services cases. Pittsburgh, PA : National Center for Juvenile Justice, 2000.

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Chapitres de livres sur le sujet "Family Court (Cook County)"

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Quinn, William H. « The Family Solutions Program : A Collaboration of the University of Georgia and the Athens/Clarke County Juvenile Court ». Dans Serving Children and Families Through Community-University Partnerships : Success Stories, 89–100. Boston, MA : Springer US, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-5053-2_13.

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Weihl, Harrington. « Bowen, Elizabeth (1899–1973) ». Dans Routledge Encyclopedia of Modernism. London : Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781135000356-rem2090-1.

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Born Elizabeth Dorothea Cole Bowen in Dublin, Ireland, on 7 June 1899, the influential and celebrated Anglo-Irish author Elizabeth Bowen produced a body of work that initially comprised fiction (novels and short stories) and later historical essays and memoirs. While growing up, Bowen spent her summers at Bowen’s Court in Kildorrery, County Cork, the family home of her father, the barrister Henry Charles Cole Bowen. Beginning in 1905 Henry Bowen suffered from a series of nervous breakdowns that resulted in him being hospitalised. On the recommendation of her father’s doctors, Bowen and her mother Florence moved away and relocated to Hythe, on the Kent coast, in 1907. The pair then moved constantly around England and Ireland, living in coastal houses with a succession of relatives and friends until 1912, when Florence died of cancer. Following her mother’s death, when she was not attending boarding school at Downe House in Kent, Bowen was cared for by various aunts and family friends. After finishing school in 1917, she worked in a hospital where she cared for shell-shocked veterans of the First World War. After the war, Bowen attended the London County Council School of Art; while attending art school, she also wrote, eventually leaving off the visual arts and turning her attention entirely to writing.
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Feld, Barry C. « The Juvenile Court ». Dans The Handbook of Crime & ; Punishment, 509–41. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195110661.003.0020.

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Abstract Ideological changes in the cultural conceptions of children and in strategies of social control during the nineteenth century led to the creation of the first juvenile court in Cook County, Illinois, in 1899. Culminating a century-long process of differentiating youths from adult offenders, Progressive Era reformers combined new theories of social control with new ideas about childhood and created the juvenile court as a social welfare alternative to criminal courts to respond to criminal and noncriminal misconduct by youths (Fox 1970; Platt 1977).
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Hodgson, Roiya. « 4. The Single Family Court ». Dans Family Law, 36. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198860730.003.0004.

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This chapter is a short but important chapter. It provides an overview of the Single Family Court, which was created in April 2014. This is a huge change from when there used to be two family courts, magistrates’ and county court. It summarizes the effects of the Single Family Court and outlines who is involved in the judicial process within the new structure. It discusses how the allocation of cases within the Single Family Court are done by ‘gatekeepers’ and the new points of entry for cases. It outlines that the rules for allocation can be found in the Family Court (Composition and Distribution of Business) Rules 2014.
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Sendall, Jane, et Roiya Hodgson. « 4. The Single Family Court ». Dans Family Law 2020, 36. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198855033.003.0004.

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This chapter is a short but important chapter. It provides an overview of the Single Family Court, which was created in April 2014. This is a huge change from when there used to be two family courts, magistrates’ and county court. It summarizes the effects of the Single Family Court and outlines who is involved in the judicial process within the new structure. It discusses how the allocation of cases within the Single Family Court are done by ‘gatekeepers’ and the new points of entry for cases. It outlines that the rules for allocation can be found in the Family Court (Composition and Distribution of Business) Rules 2014.
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Sendall, Jane. « 36. Protection under the Family Law Act 1996 : Procedure ». Dans Family Law 2019, 411–27. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198837732.003.0036.

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This chapter discusses the procedure for obtaining orders under the Family Law Act 1996 without notice, on notice, and when enforcing orders. Proceedings are commenced using a Form FL401 and a statement in support. Proceedings can be commenced in either the county court or family proceedings court. Funding is available for those eligible for CLS funding. The respondent should be personally served with the FL401 and the statement in support unless the application is to be made without notice. Police should be contacted if a non-molestation order is breached and if an occupation order has a power of arrest attached to it.
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Sendall, Jane. « 36. Protection under the Family Law Act 1996 : Procedure ». Dans Family Law 2018. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198787716.003.0036.

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This chapter discusses the procedure for obtaining orders under the Family Law Act 1996 without notice, on notice, and when enforcing orders. Proceedings are commenced using a Form FL401 and a statement in support. Proceedings can be commenced in either the county court or family proceedings court. Funding is available for those eligible for CLS funding. The respondent should be personally served with the FL401 and the statement in support unless the application is to be made without notice. Police should be contacted if a non-molestation order is breached and if an occupation order has a power of arrest attached to it.
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« A gentry family in county and court society 1603–1642 ». Dans Transforming English Rural Society, 15–26. Cambridge University Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511495755.004.

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Schlabach, Elizabeth Schroeder. « Legal Strategies for Policy Women ». Dans Dream Books and Gamblers, 123–42. University of Illinois Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252044786.003.0007.

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Using arrest records and criminal proceedings from the Cook County Circuit Court and Municipal Court of Chicago, this chapter examines arrest rates and records of non-conviction for policy gambling violations. It also presents the legal strategies that Black women arrested for policy gambling–related crimes employed to avoid jail. Black women’s strategies to avoid jail time contrast with the Chicago Police Department’s reliance on search and seizure laws to make policy-related arrests. The unusual combination of frequent arrests and few convictions created a “quasi-criminal” status for Black women that had a range of adverse social consequences both within and outside the policy gambling industry.
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Sime, Stuart. « 3. The Civil Courts ». Dans A Practical Approach to Civil Procedure, 22–31. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198838593.003.0003.

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This chapter describes the civil courts in England and Wales. It covers the composition and administration of magistrates’s courts, County Court, and the High Court; jurisdiction; High Court Divisions (Queen’s Bench Division (QBD), Chancery Division (ChD), and Family Division), and specialist courts (Business and Property Courts, Technology and Construction Court, Commercial Court, Administrative Court, Companies Court, Patents Court, and Intellectual Property Enterprise Court). For most civil claims the claimant has a free choice between the High Court and the County Court. Common law claims are suitable for the Queen’s Bench Division, whereas equity claims are more suitable for the Chancery Division. The High Court should be used for the more important and complex claims.
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Rapports d'organisations sur le sujet "Family Court (Cook County)"

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Lee, Barbara. A consumer evaluation of the Clackamas County Family Court Service. Portland State University Library, janvier 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.2802.

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