U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government, Department of Justice.

NCJRS Virtual Library

The Virtual Library houses over 235,000 criminal justice resources, including all known OJP works.
Click here to search the NCJRS Virtual Library

Cross-Sector Collaboration Between Law Enforcement, Courts, Child Welfare, and Schools to Address the Impact of Substance Use Disorders on Children and Families in the United States

NCJ Number
308180
Date Published
August 2023
Length
27 pages
Annotation

This document addresses the societal impact of substance use disorder and drug overdose deaths by examining how law enforcement, courts, child welfare, and schools have traditionally intersected with behavioral health, and presents eight key factors for successful cross-sector collaboration.

Abstract

This report discusses the societal impacts of substance use disorders (SUDs) and overdose deaths, highlighting the negative consequences for the individuals with SUDs as well as their children and families; it notes that children with a parent or caregiver who has a SUD are more likely to experience trauma such as witnessing or experiencing violence, losing a caregiver to overdose, and removal from the home. The report examines how law enforcement, courts, child welfare, and schools have traditionally intersected with behavioral health; it defines cross-sector collaboration; and it highlights opportunities and challenges associated with collaboration across sectors. The report also highlights “eight key ingredients” to successful cross-sector collaboration across law enforcement, courts, child welfare, and schools, based on interviews with stakeholders who are engaged in those types of collaborative efforts across the country. The report is organized into three main sections, that describe traditional approaches, define cross-sector collaboration, and detail the “eight key ingredients,” plus a fourth main section that provides examples of successful cross-sector collaboration.