“…However, rates of childhood poverty in Canada have not decreased since the 1950s (Campaign 2000; Family Services Toronto, 2014; Statistics Canada, 2009), current waiting times to see a child psychiatrist are typically several months (Kowalewski, McLennan, & McGrath, 2011) and many children are never referred for assessment (Sayal, 2006; Waddell, McEwen, Shepherd, Offord, & Hua, 2005), child welfare systems are overburdened and underresourced (Blackstock, Cross, George, Brown, & Formsma, 2006), and the intergenerational impacts of colonization on Indigenous populations have not been properly addressed (Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, 2015). Criminal justice systems across the country are repositories for individuals who come from disadvantaged childhoods (Corrado, Freedman, & Blatier, 2011; Corrado, Kuehn, & Margaritescu, 2014); prisoners living with mental illness and FASD make up a notable percentage of this population (Burd et al., 2003; Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, 2013; Fast et al., 1999; MacPhail & Verdun-Jones, 2013; Popova et al., 2011); and Indigenous peoples are overrepresented (Corrado et al., 2014; Cunneen, 2014). Canada lacks a national strategy aimed at improving prison and postincarceration supports and services for prisoners living with mental illness, addictions, and cognitive deficits, despite research indicating the substantial human, financial, and societal gains that can be made with better coordination of policies and services (Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, 2013).…”