The Treatment and Rehabilitation of OffendersIain D Crow SAGE, 28 mei 2001 - 248 pagina's `[A] useful and informative book. ...I would recommend it to students wanting a good introduction to the current issues in criminal justice and probation′ - Vista: Perspectives on Probation `The three chapters on treatment in practice are all excellent; the treatment of sex offenders, mentally disordered offenders and the treatment of drug misuse are all described within the social context of public concern... Ian gives a good overview of the sex offenders′ treatment program as operated in prisons and Finkelhors model which is typically used by probation in working with offenders′ - Simon Bass, Caring Magazine Treatment and rehabilitation have been central to the development of criminal justice policy, and have played an important role in the development of criminology. In recent years punishment and retribution have attracted more attention than rehabilitation, but there has been a resurgence of interest in treatment and rehabilitation, with indications that some things do ′work′, and an emphasis on ′evidence-based′ policy making. It is also the belief of many that a penal policy without an adequate treatment strategy is unjust and a denial of human rights. In this book Iain Crow provides an accessible overview of the concepts of treatment and rehabilitation, adopting a deliberately broad definition, and considers the historical basis of treatment, and its place within the penal system and British criminology. The collapse of the ′rehabilitative ideal′ is examined, along with what followed it and the development of the more recent ′what works′ movement. The basis for evaluating ′what works′ is also subjected to critical examination. In the second part, the book looks at the part that particular agencies such as the Probation Service, prison and non-statutory organisations have played in the treatment of offenders. In Part Three, the issues raised by treatment and rehabilitation are illustrated with reference to three groups of offenders: sexual offenders, drug misusers and mentally disordered offenders. The Treatment and Rehabilitation of Offenders will be essential reading for students of criminology and criminal justice at both undergraduate and post-graduate levels. |
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Resultaten 1-5 van 27
... Paradigm 5 Types of Treatment and Rehabilitation 7 Types of Offender 9 Issues in Treatment and Rehabilitation 15 2 Nothing Works! 21 A Historical Perspective 21 The Decline of Treatment 25 What Replaced the Treatment Model? 30 End of an ...
... paradigm of how to deal with offenders that reached its highest point during the period following the Second World War. It was characterised to a large extent by its curative nature and by its tendency to regard the offender as a ...
... Paradigm. In order to understand the origins of the treatment paradigm in criminology it is necessary to refer to its basis in sociology, where it is linked with positivism, and in particular with an organic view of society. This view is ...
... paradigm in dealing with offenders means that some forms of intervention have been literally medical or quasimedical in nature, involving various forms of therapy. But many other forms of intervention have gone under the broad heading ...
... paradigm are casework, which has been used by social workers and probation officers for many years, and counselling techniques. These are usually based on a one-to-one relationship. Other forms of intervention involve group work ...
Inhoudsopgave
3 | |
21 | |
38 | |
Chapter 4 What Works? | 58 |
The Institutions of Treatment | 81 |
Chapter 5 On Probation | 83 |
Chapter 6 In Prison | 103 |
Treatment in Practice | 119 |
Chapter 7 The Treatment of Sex Offenders | 121 |
Chapter 8 Mentally Disordered Offenders | 141 |
Chapter 9 The Treatment of Drug Misuse | 165 |
Beyond Treatment | 197 |
Chapter 10 Treatment and Social Policy | 199 |
References | 217 |
Index | 232 |