Abstract
This article analyses key principles underlying problem-solving court processes in the light of therapeutic jurisprudence and suggests how mainstream courts can use them. Therapeutic jurisprudence -- the study of the effect of laws and legal processes on well-being -- has become problem-solving courts' underlying ethos. It suggests that findings from the behavioural sciences can inform the development of legal processes. Therapeutic jurisprudence principles also underlie another court innovation: Indigenous sentencing courts.
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