Smart Decarceration
Achieving Criminal Justice Transformation in the 21st Century
Herausgeber: Epperson, Matthew; Pettus-Davis, Carrie
Smart Decarceration
Achieving Criminal Justice Transformation in the 21st Century
Herausgeber: Epperson, Matthew; Pettus-Davis, Carrie
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Smart Decarceration is a forward-thinking, practical volume that provides concrete strategies for an era of decarceration. This timely work consists of chapters written from multiple perspectives and disciplines including scholars, practitioners, and persons with incarceration histories. The text grapples with tough questions and builds a foundation for the decarceration field.
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Smart Decarceration is a forward-thinking, practical volume that provides concrete strategies for an era of decarceration. This timely work consists of chapters written from multiple perspectives and disciplines including scholars, practitioners, and persons with incarceration histories. The text grapples with tough questions and builds a foundation for the decarceration field.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. September 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 155mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 562g
- ISBN-13: 9780190653095
- ISBN-10: 0190653094
- Artikelnr.: 48744554
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. September 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 155mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 562g
- ISBN-13: 9780190653095
- ISBN-10: 0190653094
- Artikelnr.: 48744554
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Matthew Epperson, PhD, MSW, is an associate professor at the University of Chicago School of Social Service Administration and founding co-director of the Smart Decarceration Initiative. His research centers on developing, implementing, and evaluating interventions to reduce disparities in the criminal justice system. Carrie Pettus-Davis, PhD, MSW, is founding director of the Institute for Advancing Justice Research and Innovation and founding co-director of the Smart Decarceration Initiative. Professor Pettus-Davis oversees research to better understand factors and disseminate practices that will dramatically reduce incarceration rates.
* Contributors
* Foreword by Michael Sherraden
* Introduction by Matthew Epperson
* Part I: Setting the Context for Decarceration
* Chapter 1: Smart Decarceration: Guiding Concepts for an Era of
Criminal Justice Transformation
* Matthew Epperson and Carrie Pettus-Davis
* Chapter 2: Reflections on a Locked Door: Lessons from History and the
Failed Promise of Penal Incarceration
* Rebecca Ginsburg
* Chapter 3: From Moment to Movement: The Urgency for Formerly
Incarcerated Individuals to Lead Decarceration Efforts
* Glenn E. Martin
* Part II: Advancing Justice and Community Reforms
* Chapter 4: From the Inside Out: A Perspective on Decarceration from a
Formerly Incarcerated Individual
* Ronald Simpson-Bey
* Chapter 5: The Prosecutor's Role in Promoting Decarceration: Lessons
Learned from Milwaukee County
* John Chisholm and Jeffery Altenburg
* Chapter 6: Learning to Lead in the Decarceration Movement
* Vivian D. Nixon
* Chapter 7: Prisoner Reentry in an Era of Smart Decarceration
* Reuben Jonathan Miller
* Chapter 8: Community and Decarceration: Developing Localized
Solutions
* Kathryn Bocanegra
* Part III: Rethinking Policy and Practice
* Chapter 9: Minimizing the Maximum: The Case for Shortening All Prison
Sentences
* Nazgol Ghandnoosh
* Chapter 10: Reforming Civil Disability Policy to Facilitate Effective
and Sustainable Decarceration
* Carrie Pettus-Davis, Matthew Epperson, and Annie Grier
* Chapter 11: A Public Health Approach to Decarceration: Strategies to
Reduce the Prison and Jail Population and Support Reentry
* Ernest Drucker
* Chapter 12: Community Interventions for Justice Involved Individuals:
Assessing Gaps in Programming to Promote Decarceration
* Faye S. Taxman and Amy Murphy
* Chapter 13: Empirical Means to Decarcerative Ends? Advancing the
Science and Practice of Risk Assessment
* Julian Adler, Sarah Picard-Fritsche, Michael Rempel, and Jennifer A.
Tallon
* Part IV: Moving from Concepts to Strategies
* Chapter 14: Imagining the Future of Justice: Advancing Decarceration
through Multisector Social Innovations
* Margaret E. Severson
* Chapter 15: Guideposts for the Smart Decarceration Era:
Recommendations Strategies for Researchers, Practitioners, and
Formerly Incarcerated Leaders
* Carrie Pettus-Davis, Matthew Epperson, Samuel Taylor, and Annie Grier
* Index
* Foreword by Michael Sherraden
* Introduction by Matthew Epperson
* Part I: Setting the Context for Decarceration
* Chapter 1: Smart Decarceration: Guiding Concepts for an Era of
Criminal Justice Transformation
* Matthew Epperson and Carrie Pettus-Davis
* Chapter 2: Reflections on a Locked Door: Lessons from History and the
Failed Promise of Penal Incarceration
* Rebecca Ginsburg
* Chapter 3: From Moment to Movement: The Urgency for Formerly
Incarcerated Individuals to Lead Decarceration Efforts
* Glenn E. Martin
* Part II: Advancing Justice and Community Reforms
* Chapter 4: From the Inside Out: A Perspective on Decarceration from a
Formerly Incarcerated Individual
* Ronald Simpson-Bey
* Chapter 5: The Prosecutor's Role in Promoting Decarceration: Lessons
Learned from Milwaukee County
* John Chisholm and Jeffery Altenburg
* Chapter 6: Learning to Lead in the Decarceration Movement
* Vivian D. Nixon
* Chapter 7: Prisoner Reentry in an Era of Smart Decarceration
* Reuben Jonathan Miller
* Chapter 8: Community and Decarceration: Developing Localized
Solutions
* Kathryn Bocanegra
* Part III: Rethinking Policy and Practice
* Chapter 9: Minimizing the Maximum: The Case for Shortening All Prison
Sentences
* Nazgol Ghandnoosh
* Chapter 10: Reforming Civil Disability Policy to Facilitate Effective
and Sustainable Decarceration
* Carrie Pettus-Davis, Matthew Epperson, and Annie Grier
* Chapter 11: A Public Health Approach to Decarceration: Strategies to
Reduce the Prison and Jail Population and Support Reentry
* Ernest Drucker
* Chapter 12: Community Interventions for Justice Involved Individuals:
Assessing Gaps in Programming to Promote Decarceration
* Faye S. Taxman and Amy Murphy
* Chapter 13: Empirical Means to Decarcerative Ends? Advancing the
Science and Practice of Risk Assessment
* Julian Adler, Sarah Picard-Fritsche, Michael Rempel, and Jennifer A.
Tallon
* Part IV: Moving from Concepts to Strategies
* Chapter 14: Imagining the Future of Justice: Advancing Decarceration
through Multisector Social Innovations
* Margaret E. Severson
* Chapter 15: Guideposts for the Smart Decarceration Era:
Recommendations Strategies for Researchers, Practitioners, and
Formerly Incarcerated Leaders
* Carrie Pettus-Davis, Matthew Epperson, Samuel Taylor, and Annie Grier
* Index
* Contributors
* Foreword by Michael Sherraden
* Introduction by Matthew Epperson
* Part I: Setting the Context for Decarceration
* Chapter 1: Smart Decarceration: Guiding Concepts for an Era of
Criminal Justice Transformation
* Matthew Epperson and Carrie Pettus-Davis
* Chapter 2: Reflections on a Locked Door: Lessons from History and the
Failed Promise of Penal Incarceration
* Rebecca Ginsburg
* Chapter 3: From Moment to Movement: The Urgency for Formerly
Incarcerated Individuals to Lead Decarceration Efforts
* Glenn E. Martin
* Part II: Advancing Justice and Community Reforms
* Chapter 4: From the Inside Out: A Perspective on Decarceration from a
Formerly Incarcerated Individual
* Ronald Simpson-Bey
* Chapter 5: The Prosecutor's Role in Promoting Decarceration: Lessons
Learned from Milwaukee County
* John Chisholm and Jeffery Altenburg
* Chapter 6: Learning to Lead in the Decarceration Movement
* Vivian D. Nixon
* Chapter 7: Prisoner Reentry in an Era of Smart Decarceration
* Reuben Jonathan Miller
* Chapter 8: Community and Decarceration: Developing Localized
Solutions
* Kathryn Bocanegra
* Part III: Rethinking Policy and Practice
* Chapter 9: Minimizing the Maximum: The Case for Shortening All Prison
Sentences
* Nazgol Ghandnoosh
* Chapter 10: Reforming Civil Disability Policy to Facilitate Effective
and Sustainable Decarceration
* Carrie Pettus-Davis, Matthew Epperson, and Annie Grier
* Chapter 11: A Public Health Approach to Decarceration: Strategies to
Reduce the Prison and Jail Population and Support Reentry
* Ernest Drucker
* Chapter 12: Community Interventions for Justice Involved Individuals:
Assessing Gaps in Programming to Promote Decarceration
* Faye S. Taxman and Amy Murphy
* Chapter 13: Empirical Means to Decarcerative Ends? Advancing the
Science and Practice of Risk Assessment
* Julian Adler, Sarah Picard-Fritsche, Michael Rempel, and Jennifer A.
Tallon
* Part IV: Moving from Concepts to Strategies
* Chapter 14: Imagining the Future of Justice: Advancing Decarceration
through Multisector Social Innovations
* Margaret E. Severson
* Chapter 15: Guideposts for the Smart Decarceration Era:
Recommendations Strategies for Researchers, Practitioners, and
Formerly Incarcerated Leaders
* Carrie Pettus-Davis, Matthew Epperson, Samuel Taylor, and Annie Grier
* Index
* Foreword by Michael Sherraden
* Introduction by Matthew Epperson
* Part I: Setting the Context for Decarceration
* Chapter 1: Smart Decarceration: Guiding Concepts for an Era of
Criminal Justice Transformation
* Matthew Epperson and Carrie Pettus-Davis
* Chapter 2: Reflections on a Locked Door: Lessons from History and the
Failed Promise of Penal Incarceration
* Rebecca Ginsburg
* Chapter 3: From Moment to Movement: The Urgency for Formerly
Incarcerated Individuals to Lead Decarceration Efforts
* Glenn E. Martin
* Part II: Advancing Justice and Community Reforms
* Chapter 4: From the Inside Out: A Perspective on Decarceration from a
Formerly Incarcerated Individual
* Ronald Simpson-Bey
* Chapter 5: The Prosecutor's Role in Promoting Decarceration: Lessons
Learned from Milwaukee County
* John Chisholm and Jeffery Altenburg
* Chapter 6: Learning to Lead in the Decarceration Movement
* Vivian D. Nixon
* Chapter 7: Prisoner Reentry in an Era of Smart Decarceration
* Reuben Jonathan Miller
* Chapter 8: Community and Decarceration: Developing Localized
Solutions
* Kathryn Bocanegra
* Part III: Rethinking Policy and Practice
* Chapter 9: Minimizing the Maximum: The Case for Shortening All Prison
Sentences
* Nazgol Ghandnoosh
* Chapter 10: Reforming Civil Disability Policy to Facilitate Effective
and Sustainable Decarceration
* Carrie Pettus-Davis, Matthew Epperson, and Annie Grier
* Chapter 11: A Public Health Approach to Decarceration: Strategies to
Reduce the Prison and Jail Population and Support Reentry
* Ernest Drucker
* Chapter 12: Community Interventions for Justice Involved Individuals:
Assessing Gaps in Programming to Promote Decarceration
* Faye S. Taxman and Amy Murphy
* Chapter 13: Empirical Means to Decarcerative Ends? Advancing the
Science and Practice of Risk Assessment
* Julian Adler, Sarah Picard-Fritsche, Michael Rempel, and Jennifer A.
Tallon
* Part IV: Moving from Concepts to Strategies
* Chapter 14: Imagining the Future of Justice: Advancing Decarceration
through Multisector Social Innovations
* Margaret E. Severson
* Chapter 15: Guideposts for the Smart Decarceration Era:
Recommendations Strategies for Researchers, Practitioners, and
Formerly Incarcerated Leaders
* Carrie Pettus-Davis, Matthew Epperson, Samuel Taylor, and Annie Grier
* Index