The Routledge Companion to Rehabilitative Work in Criminal Justice (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Ugwudike, Pamela; Trotter, Chris; Taxman, Faye S.; Raynor, Peter; Mcneill, Fergus; Graham, Hannah
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The Routledge Companion to Rehabilitative Work in Criminal Justice (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Ugwudike, Pamela; Trotter, Chris; Taxman, Faye S.; Raynor, Peter; Mcneill, Fergus; Graham, Hannah
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Covering a variety of contexts, settings, needs and approaches, and drawing on theory and practice, this book brings together over ninety entries, offering concise and definitive overviews of a range of key issues on working with offenders.
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Covering a variety of contexts, settings, needs and approaches, and drawing on theory and practice, this book brings together over ninety entries, offering concise and definitive overviews of a range of key issues on working with offenders.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 1232
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. September 2019
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781351593274
- Artikelnr.: 57720905
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 1232
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. September 2019
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781351593274
- Artikelnr.: 57720905
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Pamela Ugwudike, Peter Raynor, Chris Trotter
1. An Introduction to The Routledge Companion to Rehabilitative Work in
Criminal Justice; SECTION ONE: THEORIES AND MODELS FOR WORKING WITH
OFFENDERS; 2. Conceptualising Rehabilitation: Four forms, two models, one
process and a plethora of challenges; 3. Promoting inclusion and
citizenship? Selective reflections on the recent history of the policy and
practice of rehabilitation in England and Wales; 4. Should there be a right
to rehabilitation?; 5. Human Rights and Rehabilitative Work in Criminal
Justice; 6. Retribution and Rehabilitation: Taking Punishment Seriously in
a Humane Society; 7. Restorative Justice: A different approach to working
with offenders and with those whom they have harmed; 8. The Evidence-based
Approach to Correctional Rehabilitation: Current status of the
Risk-Need-Responsivity (RNR) Model of Offender Rehabilitation; 9. An
overview of the Good Lives Model: Theory and evidence; 10. Diversifying
desistance research; 11. Doing justice to desistance narratives
12. Therapeutic jurisprudence and rehabilitation; SECTION TWO: POLICY
CONTEXTS AND CULTURES; 13. The 'Transforming Rehabilitation' agenda in
England and Wales: implications of privatisation; 14. The Rehabilitative
Prison: an oxymoron, or an opportunity to radically reform the way we do
punishment?; 15. Rehabilitation and re-entry in Scandinavia; 16. Using
technology and digitally enabled approaches to support desistance; 17.
Prisons, personal development and austerity; SECTION THREE: ASSESSMENT
PRACTICE; Chapter 18. Risk and need assessment: Development, critics and a
realist approach; 19. A critical review of risk assessment policy and
practice since the 1990s; 20. The promises and perils of
gender-responsivity: Risk, incarceration, and rehabilitation; 21. Risk and
need assessment in youth justice: key challenges; 22. Pre-sentence reports:
constructing the subject of punishment and rehabilitation; SECTION FOUR:
DIRECT WORK WITH OFFENDERS; 23. Examining community supervision officers'
skills and behaviours: A review of strategies for identifying the
inner-workings of face-to-face supervision sessions; 24. Motivational
Interviewing: Application to Practice in a Probation Context; 25.
Trauma-informed practices with youth in criminal justice settings; 26.
Building social capital to encourage desistance: Lessons from a
veteran-specific project; 27. Working with veterans and addressing
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder; 28. Prosocial Modelling; 29. Core
Correctional Practices: The Role of the Working Alliance in Offender
Rehabilitation; 30. Gut Check: Turning Experience into Knowledge; 31.
Applications of Psychotherapy in Statutory Domestic Violence Perpetrator
Programmes: Challenging the Dominance of Cognitive Behavioural Models; 32.
Arts-based interventions in the justice system; 33. The use of sport to
promote desistance from crime: lessons from across the prison estate; 34.
Violent Offenders: Contemporary issues in Risk Assessment, Treatment and
Management; 35. Effective approaches to working with sex offenders; 36.
'Five-minute interventions' in prison: rehabilitative conversations with
offenders; 37. The benefits of mindfulness-based interventions in the
criminal justice system: a review of the evidence; 38. Mentoring in the
Justice System; 39. The contribution of ex-service users: An Analysis of
the Life and Death of a Peer Mentor Employment Rehabilitation Programme;
40. Co-producing outcomes with service users in the penal system; 41.
Victim-focused Work with offenders; SECTION FIVE: RESETTLEMENT; Chapter 42.
Preparing prisoners for release: Current and recurrent challenges; 43.
Prisoner Reentry in the United States; 44. Post-release residential
supervision; 45. The Health Needs of People Leaving Prison: A New Horizon
to Address; Chapter 46. Rights, Advocacy and Transformation; 47.
Strengths-Based Reentry and Resettlement; 48. The Role of Third Sector
Organisations in Supporting Resettlement and Reintegration; SECTION SIX:
APPLICATION TO SPECIFIC GROUPS; 49. More Sinned against than Sinning:
Women's pathways into crime and criminalisation; 50. What Works with Female
Offenders? A UK Perspective; 51. Gender-Responsive Approaches for Women in
the United States; 52. Women's experiences of the criminal justice system;
53. Working with Black and Minority Ethnic Groups in the Penal System; 54.
'Race', Rehabilitation and Offender Management; 55. Hamlet's Dilemma:
Racialization, agency, and the barriers to black men's desistance; 56.
Applications of risk prediction technologies in criminal justice: The nexus
of race and digitised control; 57. Cultural competency in community
corrections; 58. Responding to youth offending: historical and current
developments in practice; 59. Youth Justice in Wales; 60. 'Rights-Based'
and 'Children and Young People First' Approaches to Youth Justice; 61.
Effective supervision of young offenders; 62. Working with young people in
prison; 63 Prevention Work with Young People; 64. Realising the potential
of community reparation for young offenders; 65. Foreign national
prisoners: Precarity and deportability as obstacles to rehabilitation; 66.
End of life in prison: challenges for prisons, staff and prisoners; 67.
Older Prisoners: A Challenge for Correctional Services; 68. The role of
offenders' family links in offender rehabilitation; 69. The Impact of
Imprisonment on Families; SECTION SEVEN: SECTION SEVEN: CONTROL AND
SURVEILLANCE; 70. Approaches to working with young people: encouraging
compliance; 71. Compliance during community-based penal supervision; 72.
The Impact of adjudications and discipline; 73. Electronic monitoring and
rehabilitation; 74. Integrated offender management and rehabilitation for
adult offenders in England and Wales; SECTION EIGHT: THE MANY HATS OF
PROBATION: PRACTICE ETHOS AND PRACTITIONERS' PERSPECTIVES; 75. Probation
worker identities: responding to change and turbulence in community
rehabilitation; 76. Probation values in England and Wales: can they survive
Transforming Rehabilitation?; 77. Probation and Parole - Shaping Principles
and Practices in the Early 21st Century: A US Perspective; 78. How
practitioners conceptualise quality: A UK Perspective; 79. The balancing
act of probation supervision: The roles and philosophies of probation
officers in the evidence-based practice era; 80. Innovations to transform
probation supervision: An examination of experiences across eleven US
agencies; SECTION NINE: LIVED EXPERIENCES FROM THE LENS OF INDIVIDUALS
INVOLVED IN THE JUSTICE SYSTEM AND PRACTITIONERS; 81. Experiencing
community-based supervision: the pains of probation; 82. Experiencing
Probation: Results from the Honest Opportunity Probation with Enforcement
(HOPE) Demonstration Field Experiment: US Perspective; 83. Pain, Harm and
Punishment; SECTION TEN: THE DEVELOPMENT OF AN EVIDENCE BASE; 84. Features
of Effective Prison-based Programmes for Reducing Recidivism; 85.
Performance Measure in Community Corrections: Measuring Effective
Supervision Practices with Existing Agency Data; 86. Visual methods and
Probation Practice; 87. Evaluating practice: Observation methods; 88.
Evaluating Women's Programmes; 89. Group programmes with offenders; 90.
Evaluating Group Programmes: A Question of Design?; 91. The Lost Narrative
in Carceral Settings: Evaluative Practices and Methods to Improve Process
and Outcomes Within Institutions; 92. Probation research, evidence and
policy: the British experience
Criminal Justice; SECTION ONE: THEORIES AND MODELS FOR WORKING WITH
OFFENDERS; 2. Conceptualising Rehabilitation: Four forms, two models, one
process and a plethora of challenges; 3. Promoting inclusion and
citizenship? Selective reflections on the recent history of the policy and
practice of rehabilitation in England and Wales; 4. Should there be a right
to rehabilitation?; 5. Human Rights and Rehabilitative Work in Criminal
Justice; 6. Retribution and Rehabilitation: Taking Punishment Seriously in
a Humane Society; 7. Restorative Justice: A different approach to working
with offenders and with those whom they have harmed; 8. The Evidence-based
Approach to Correctional Rehabilitation: Current status of the
Risk-Need-Responsivity (RNR) Model of Offender Rehabilitation; 9. An
overview of the Good Lives Model: Theory and evidence; 10. Diversifying
desistance research; 11. Doing justice to desistance narratives
12. Therapeutic jurisprudence and rehabilitation; SECTION TWO: POLICY
CONTEXTS AND CULTURES; 13. The 'Transforming Rehabilitation' agenda in
England and Wales: implications of privatisation; 14. The Rehabilitative
Prison: an oxymoron, or an opportunity to radically reform the way we do
punishment?; 15. Rehabilitation and re-entry in Scandinavia; 16. Using
technology and digitally enabled approaches to support desistance; 17.
Prisons, personal development and austerity; SECTION THREE: ASSESSMENT
PRACTICE; Chapter 18. Risk and need assessment: Development, critics and a
realist approach; 19. A critical review of risk assessment policy and
practice since the 1990s; 20. The promises and perils of
gender-responsivity: Risk, incarceration, and rehabilitation; 21. Risk and
need assessment in youth justice: key challenges; 22. Pre-sentence reports:
constructing the subject of punishment and rehabilitation; SECTION FOUR:
DIRECT WORK WITH OFFENDERS; 23. Examining community supervision officers'
skills and behaviours: A review of strategies for identifying the
inner-workings of face-to-face supervision sessions; 24. Motivational
Interviewing: Application to Practice in a Probation Context; 25.
Trauma-informed practices with youth in criminal justice settings; 26.
Building social capital to encourage desistance: Lessons from a
veteran-specific project; 27. Working with veterans and addressing
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder; 28. Prosocial Modelling; 29. Core
Correctional Practices: The Role of the Working Alliance in Offender
Rehabilitation; 30. Gut Check: Turning Experience into Knowledge; 31.
Applications of Psychotherapy in Statutory Domestic Violence Perpetrator
Programmes: Challenging the Dominance of Cognitive Behavioural Models; 32.
Arts-based interventions in the justice system; 33. The use of sport to
promote desistance from crime: lessons from across the prison estate; 34.
Violent Offenders: Contemporary issues in Risk Assessment, Treatment and
Management; 35. Effective approaches to working with sex offenders; 36.
'Five-minute interventions' in prison: rehabilitative conversations with
offenders; 37. The benefits of mindfulness-based interventions in the
criminal justice system: a review of the evidence; 38. Mentoring in the
Justice System; 39. The contribution of ex-service users: An Analysis of
the Life and Death of a Peer Mentor Employment Rehabilitation Programme;
40. Co-producing outcomes with service users in the penal system; 41.
Victim-focused Work with offenders; SECTION FIVE: RESETTLEMENT; Chapter 42.
Preparing prisoners for release: Current and recurrent challenges; 43.
Prisoner Reentry in the United States; 44. Post-release residential
supervision; 45. The Health Needs of People Leaving Prison: A New Horizon
to Address; Chapter 46. Rights, Advocacy and Transformation; 47.
Strengths-Based Reentry and Resettlement; 48. The Role of Third Sector
Organisations in Supporting Resettlement and Reintegration; SECTION SIX:
APPLICATION TO SPECIFIC GROUPS; 49. More Sinned against than Sinning:
Women's pathways into crime and criminalisation; 50. What Works with Female
Offenders? A UK Perspective; 51. Gender-Responsive Approaches for Women in
the United States; 52. Women's experiences of the criminal justice system;
53. Working with Black and Minority Ethnic Groups in the Penal System; 54.
'Race', Rehabilitation and Offender Management; 55. Hamlet's Dilemma:
Racialization, agency, and the barriers to black men's desistance; 56.
Applications of risk prediction technologies in criminal justice: The nexus
of race and digitised control; 57. Cultural competency in community
corrections; 58. Responding to youth offending: historical and current
developments in practice; 59. Youth Justice in Wales; 60. 'Rights-Based'
and 'Children and Young People First' Approaches to Youth Justice; 61.
Effective supervision of young offenders; 62. Working with young people in
prison; 63 Prevention Work with Young People; 64. Realising the potential
of community reparation for young offenders; 65. Foreign national
prisoners: Precarity and deportability as obstacles to rehabilitation; 66.
End of life in prison: challenges for prisons, staff and prisoners; 67.
Older Prisoners: A Challenge for Correctional Services; 68. The role of
offenders' family links in offender rehabilitation; 69. The Impact of
Imprisonment on Families; SECTION SEVEN: SECTION SEVEN: CONTROL AND
SURVEILLANCE; 70. Approaches to working with young people: encouraging
compliance; 71. Compliance during community-based penal supervision; 72.
The Impact of adjudications and discipline; 73. Electronic monitoring and
rehabilitation; 74. Integrated offender management and rehabilitation for
adult offenders in England and Wales; SECTION EIGHT: THE MANY HATS OF
PROBATION: PRACTICE ETHOS AND PRACTITIONERS' PERSPECTIVES; 75. Probation
worker identities: responding to change and turbulence in community
rehabilitation; 76. Probation values in England and Wales: can they survive
Transforming Rehabilitation?; 77. Probation and Parole - Shaping Principles
and Practices in the Early 21st Century: A US Perspective; 78. How
practitioners conceptualise quality: A UK Perspective; 79. The balancing
act of probation supervision: The roles and philosophies of probation
officers in the evidence-based practice era; 80. Innovations to transform
probation supervision: An examination of experiences across eleven US
agencies; SECTION NINE: LIVED EXPERIENCES FROM THE LENS OF INDIVIDUALS
INVOLVED IN THE JUSTICE SYSTEM AND PRACTITIONERS; 81. Experiencing
community-based supervision: the pains of probation; 82. Experiencing
Probation: Results from the Honest Opportunity Probation with Enforcement
(HOPE) Demonstration Field Experiment: US Perspective; 83. Pain, Harm and
Punishment; SECTION TEN: THE DEVELOPMENT OF AN EVIDENCE BASE; 84. Features
of Effective Prison-based Programmes for Reducing Recidivism; 85.
Performance Measure in Community Corrections: Measuring Effective
Supervision Practices with Existing Agency Data; 86. Visual methods and
Probation Practice; 87. Evaluating practice: Observation methods; 88.
Evaluating Women's Programmes; 89. Group programmes with offenders; 90.
Evaluating Group Programmes: A Question of Design?; 91. The Lost Narrative
in Carceral Settings: Evaluative Practices and Methods to Improve Process
and Outcomes Within Institutions; 92. Probation research, evidence and
policy: the British experience
1. An Introduction to The Routledge Companion to Rehabilitative Work in
Criminal Justice; SECTION ONE: THEORIES AND MODELS FOR WORKING WITH
OFFENDERS; 2. Conceptualising Rehabilitation: Four forms, two models, one
process and a plethora of challenges; 3. Promoting inclusion and
citizenship? Selective reflections on the recent history of the policy and
practice of rehabilitation in England and Wales; 4. Should there be a right
to rehabilitation?; 5. Human Rights and Rehabilitative Work in Criminal
Justice; 6. Retribution and Rehabilitation: Taking Punishment Seriously in
a Humane Society; 7. Restorative Justice: A different approach to working
with offenders and with those whom they have harmed; 8. The Evidence-based
Approach to Correctional Rehabilitation: Current status of the
Risk-Need-Responsivity (RNR) Model of Offender Rehabilitation; 9. An
overview of the Good Lives Model: Theory and evidence; 10. Diversifying
desistance research; 11. Doing justice to desistance narratives
12. Therapeutic jurisprudence and rehabilitation; SECTION TWO: POLICY
CONTEXTS AND CULTURES; 13. The 'Transforming Rehabilitation' agenda in
England and Wales: implications of privatisation; 14. The Rehabilitative
Prison: an oxymoron, or an opportunity to radically reform the way we do
punishment?; 15. Rehabilitation and re-entry in Scandinavia; 16. Using
technology and digitally enabled approaches to support desistance; 17.
Prisons, personal development and austerity; SECTION THREE: ASSESSMENT
PRACTICE; Chapter 18. Risk and need assessment: Development, critics and a
realist approach; 19. A critical review of risk assessment policy and
practice since the 1990s; 20. The promises and perils of
gender-responsivity: Risk, incarceration, and rehabilitation; 21. Risk and
need assessment in youth justice: key challenges; 22. Pre-sentence reports:
constructing the subject of punishment and rehabilitation; SECTION FOUR:
DIRECT WORK WITH OFFENDERS; 23. Examining community supervision officers'
skills and behaviours: A review of strategies for identifying the
inner-workings of face-to-face supervision sessions; 24. Motivational
Interviewing: Application to Practice in a Probation Context; 25.
Trauma-informed practices with youth in criminal justice settings; 26.
Building social capital to encourage desistance: Lessons from a
veteran-specific project; 27. Working with veterans and addressing
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder; 28. Prosocial Modelling; 29. Core
Correctional Practices: The Role of the Working Alliance in Offender
Rehabilitation; 30. Gut Check: Turning Experience into Knowledge; 31.
Applications of Psychotherapy in Statutory Domestic Violence Perpetrator
Programmes: Challenging the Dominance of Cognitive Behavioural Models; 32.
Arts-based interventions in the justice system; 33. The use of sport to
promote desistance from crime: lessons from across the prison estate; 34.
Violent Offenders: Contemporary issues in Risk Assessment, Treatment and
Management; 35. Effective approaches to working with sex offenders; 36.
'Five-minute interventions' in prison: rehabilitative conversations with
offenders; 37. The benefits of mindfulness-based interventions in the
criminal justice system: a review of the evidence; 38. Mentoring in the
Justice System; 39. The contribution of ex-service users: An Analysis of
the Life and Death of a Peer Mentor Employment Rehabilitation Programme;
40. Co-producing outcomes with service users in the penal system; 41.
Victim-focused Work with offenders; SECTION FIVE: RESETTLEMENT; Chapter 42.
Preparing prisoners for release: Current and recurrent challenges; 43.
Prisoner Reentry in the United States; 44. Post-release residential
supervision; 45. The Health Needs of People Leaving Prison: A New Horizon
to Address; Chapter 46. Rights, Advocacy and Transformation; 47.
Strengths-Based Reentry and Resettlement; 48. The Role of Third Sector
Organisations in Supporting Resettlement and Reintegration; SECTION SIX:
APPLICATION TO SPECIFIC GROUPS; 49. More Sinned against than Sinning:
Women's pathways into crime and criminalisation; 50. What Works with Female
Offenders? A UK Perspective; 51. Gender-Responsive Approaches for Women in
the United States; 52. Women's experiences of the criminal justice system;
53. Working with Black and Minority Ethnic Groups in the Penal System; 54.
'Race', Rehabilitation and Offender Management; 55. Hamlet's Dilemma:
Racialization, agency, and the barriers to black men's desistance; 56.
Applications of risk prediction technologies in criminal justice: The nexus
of race and digitised control; 57. Cultural competency in community
corrections; 58. Responding to youth offending: historical and current
developments in practice; 59. Youth Justice in Wales; 60. 'Rights-Based'
and 'Children and Young People First' Approaches to Youth Justice; 61.
Effective supervision of young offenders; 62. Working with young people in
prison; 63 Prevention Work with Young People; 64. Realising the potential
of community reparation for young offenders; 65. Foreign national
prisoners: Precarity and deportability as obstacles to rehabilitation; 66.
End of life in prison: challenges for prisons, staff and prisoners; 67.
Older Prisoners: A Challenge for Correctional Services; 68. The role of
offenders' family links in offender rehabilitation; 69. The Impact of
Imprisonment on Families; SECTION SEVEN: SECTION SEVEN: CONTROL AND
SURVEILLANCE; 70. Approaches to working with young people: encouraging
compliance; 71. Compliance during community-based penal supervision; 72.
The Impact of adjudications and discipline; 73. Electronic monitoring and
rehabilitation; 74. Integrated offender management and rehabilitation for
adult offenders in England and Wales; SECTION EIGHT: THE MANY HATS OF
PROBATION: PRACTICE ETHOS AND PRACTITIONERS' PERSPECTIVES; 75. Probation
worker identities: responding to change and turbulence in community
rehabilitation; 76. Probation values in England and Wales: can they survive
Transforming Rehabilitation?; 77. Probation and Parole - Shaping Principles
and Practices in the Early 21st Century: A US Perspective; 78. How
practitioners conceptualise quality: A UK Perspective; 79. The balancing
act of probation supervision: The roles and philosophies of probation
officers in the evidence-based practice era; 80. Innovations to transform
probation supervision: An examination of experiences across eleven US
agencies; SECTION NINE: LIVED EXPERIENCES FROM THE LENS OF INDIVIDUALS
INVOLVED IN THE JUSTICE SYSTEM AND PRACTITIONERS; 81. Experiencing
community-based supervision: the pains of probation; 82. Experiencing
Probation: Results from the Honest Opportunity Probation with Enforcement
(HOPE) Demonstration Field Experiment: US Perspective; 83. Pain, Harm and
Punishment; SECTION TEN: THE DEVELOPMENT OF AN EVIDENCE BASE; 84. Features
of Effective Prison-based Programmes for Reducing Recidivism; 85.
Performance Measure in Community Corrections: Measuring Effective
Supervision Practices with Existing Agency Data; 86. Visual methods and
Probation Practice; 87. Evaluating practice: Observation methods; 88.
Evaluating Women's Programmes; 89. Group programmes with offenders; 90.
Evaluating Group Programmes: A Question of Design?; 91. The Lost Narrative
in Carceral Settings: Evaluative Practices and Methods to Improve Process
and Outcomes Within Institutions; 92. Probation research, evidence and
policy: the British experience
Criminal Justice; SECTION ONE: THEORIES AND MODELS FOR WORKING WITH
OFFENDERS; 2. Conceptualising Rehabilitation: Four forms, two models, one
process and a plethora of challenges; 3. Promoting inclusion and
citizenship? Selective reflections on the recent history of the policy and
practice of rehabilitation in England and Wales; 4. Should there be a right
to rehabilitation?; 5. Human Rights and Rehabilitative Work in Criminal
Justice; 6. Retribution and Rehabilitation: Taking Punishment Seriously in
a Humane Society; 7. Restorative Justice: A different approach to working
with offenders and with those whom they have harmed; 8. The Evidence-based
Approach to Correctional Rehabilitation: Current status of the
Risk-Need-Responsivity (RNR) Model of Offender Rehabilitation; 9. An
overview of the Good Lives Model: Theory and evidence; 10. Diversifying
desistance research; 11. Doing justice to desistance narratives
12. Therapeutic jurisprudence and rehabilitation; SECTION TWO: POLICY
CONTEXTS AND CULTURES; 13. The 'Transforming Rehabilitation' agenda in
England and Wales: implications of privatisation; 14. The Rehabilitative
Prison: an oxymoron, or an opportunity to radically reform the way we do
punishment?; 15. Rehabilitation and re-entry in Scandinavia; 16. Using
technology and digitally enabled approaches to support desistance; 17.
Prisons, personal development and austerity; SECTION THREE: ASSESSMENT
PRACTICE; Chapter 18. Risk and need assessment: Development, critics and a
realist approach; 19. A critical review of risk assessment policy and
practice since the 1990s; 20. The promises and perils of
gender-responsivity: Risk, incarceration, and rehabilitation; 21. Risk and
need assessment in youth justice: key challenges; 22. Pre-sentence reports:
constructing the subject of punishment and rehabilitation; SECTION FOUR:
DIRECT WORK WITH OFFENDERS; 23. Examining community supervision officers'
skills and behaviours: A review of strategies for identifying the
inner-workings of face-to-face supervision sessions; 24. Motivational
Interviewing: Application to Practice in a Probation Context; 25.
Trauma-informed practices with youth in criminal justice settings; 26.
Building social capital to encourage desistance: Lessons from a
veteran-specific project; 27. Working with veterans and addressing
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder; 28. Prosocial Modelling; 29. Core
Correctional Practices: The Role of the Working Alliance in Offender
Rehabilitation; 30. Gut Check: Turning Experience into Knowledge; 31.
Applications of Psychotherapy in Statutory Domestic Violence Perpetrator
Programmes: Challenging the Dominance of Cognitive Behavioural Models; 32.
Arts-based interventions in the justice system; 33. The use of sport to
promote desistance from crime: lessons from across the prison estate; 34.
Violent Offenders: Contemporary issues in Risk Assessment, Treatment and
Management; 35. Effective approaches to working with sex offenders; 36.
'Five-minute interventions' in prison: rehabilitative conversations with
offenders; 37. The benefits of mindfulness-based interventions in the
criminal justice system: a review of the evidence; 38. Mentoring in the
Justice System; 39. The contribution of ex-service users: An Analysis of
the Life and Death of a Peer Mentor Employment Rehabilitation Programme;
40. Co-producing outcomes with service users in the penal system; 41.
Victim-focused Work with offenders; SECTION FIVE: RESETTLEMENT; Chapter 42.
Preparing prisoners for release: Current and recurrent challenges; 43.
Prisoner Reentry in the United States; 44. Post-release residential
supervision; 45. The Health Needs of People Leaving Prison: A New Horizon
to Address; Chapter 46. Rights, Advocacy and Transformation; 47.
Strengths-Based Reentry and Resettlement; 48. The Role of Third Sector
Organisations in Supporting Resettlement and Reintegration; SECTION SIX:
APPLICATION TO SPECIFIC GROUPS; 49. More Sinned against than Sinning:
Women's pathways into crime and criminalisation; 50. What Works with Female
Offenders? A UK Perspective; 51. Gender-Responsive Approaches for Women in
the United States; 52. Women's experiences of the criminal justice system;
53. Working with Black and Minority Ethnic Groups in the Penal System; 54.
'Race', Rehabilitation and Offender Management; 55. Hamlet's Dilemma:
Racialization, agency, and the barriers to black men's desistance; 56.
Applications of risk prediction technologies in criminal justice: The nexus
of race and digitised control; 57. Cultural competency in community
corrections; 58. Responding to youth offending: historical and current
developments in practice; 59. Youth Justice in Wales; 60. 'Rights-Based'
and 'Children and Young People First' Approaches to Youth Justice; 61.
Effective supervision of young offenders; 62. Working with young people in
prison; 63 Prevention Work with Young People; 64. Realising the potential
of community reparation for young offenders; 65. Foreign national
prisoners: Precarity and deportability as obstacles to rehabilitation; 66.
End of life in prison: challenges for prisons, staff and prisoners; 67.
Older Prisoners: A Challenge for Correctional Services; 68. The role of
offenders' family links in offender rehabilitation; 69. The Impact of
Imprisonment on Families; SECTION SEVEN: SECTION SEVEN: CONTROL AND
SURVEILLANCE; 70. Approaches to working with young people: encouraging
compliance; 71. Compliance during community-based penal supervision; 72.
The Impact of adjudications and discipline; 73. Electronic monitoring and
rehabilitation; 74. Integrated offender management and rehabilitation for
adult offenders in England and Wales; SECTION EIGHT: THE MANY HATS OF
PROBATION: PRACTICE ETHOS AND PRACTITIONERS' PERSPECTIVES; 75. Probation
worker identities: responding to change and turbulence in community
rehabilitation; 76. Probation values in England and Wales: can they survive
Transforming Rehabilitation?; 77. Probation and Parole - Shaping Principles
and Practices in the Early 21st Century: A US Perspective; 78. How
practitioners conceptualise quality: A UK Perspective; 79. The balancing
act of probation supervision: The roles and philosophies of probation
officers in the evidence-based practice era; 80. Innovations to transform
probation supervision: An examination of experiences across eleven US
agencies; SECTION NINE: LIVED EXPERIENCES FROM THE LENS OF INDIVIDUALS
INVOLVED IN THE JUSTICE SYSTEM AND PRACTITIONERS; 81. Experiencing
community-based supervision: the pains of probation; 82. Experiencing
Probation: Results from the Honest Opportunity Probation with Enforcement
(HOPE) Demonstration Field Experiment: US Perspective; 83. Pain, Harm and
Punishment; SECTION TEN: THE DEVELOPMENT OF AN EVIDENCE BASE; 84. Features
of Effective Prison-based Programmes for Reducing Recidivism; 85.
Performance Measure in Community Corrections: Measuring Effective
Supervision Practices with Existing Agency Data; 86. Visual methods and
Probation Practice; 87. Evaluating practice: Observation methods; 88.
Evaluating Women's Programmes; 89. Group programmes with offenders; 90.
Evaluating Group Programmes: A Question of Design?; 91. The Lost Narrative
in Carceral Settings: Evaluative Practices and Methods to Improve Process
and Outcomes Within Institutions; 92. Probation research, evidence and
policy: the British experience