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  1. Can this be done in ways that benefit the community as a whole, as well as offenders? This book is about the history, theory, practice and effectiveness of rehabilitation. It shows how different beliefs about the value of rehabilitation and about 'what works' have influenced criminal justice policy and practice at different times, and it ...

  2. 1. Punish the offender. 2. Protect Society. 3. Rehabilitate the offender. Certainly, all four ideologies address the first two goals, punishment, and societal protection. However, the goal of rehabilitating the offender is either silent, or not addressed in retribution, deterrence, or incapacitation. This does come at a cost.

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  4. Jun 17, 2022 · Defining Rehabilitation -- Justifying Rehabilitation -- Origins and Contexts -- The Rehabilitative Ideal: Advance and Temporary Retreat -- Adapting to the End of 'Treatment' -- The New Rehabilitation: 'What Works' and Corrections at the End of the Twentieth Century -- Against the Tide: Non-Treatment Paradigms for the Twenty-First Century -- The ...

  5. We go on to consider the relevance of rehabilitation in the offender’s journey through the criminal justice process: is rehabilitation best understood as a type of punishment; as an alternative to punishment; or something which most appropriately follows punishment?

  6. Oct 11, 2017 · What Works in Crime Prevention and Rehabilitation: Lessons from Systematic Reviews (Springer Series on Evidence-Based Crime Policy): 9781493974887: Medicine & Health Science Books @ Amazon.com

    • Albert Woodfox with Leslie George, Solitary. (Grove Press / Grove Atlantic) “A candid, heartbreaking, and infuriating chronicle . . . as well as a personal narrative that shows how institutionalized racism festered at the core of our judicial system and in the country’s prisons . . .
    • Dionne Brand, Ossuaries. (McClelland & Stewart / Penguin Random House Canada) “Brand’s luscious and ferocious lines go beyond a critique of dystopian realities to construct, in themselves, in their keen, lyric intelligence, an oasis of truth, compassion, and sensuality.”
    • Nicole R. Fleetwood, Marking Time: Art in the Age of Mass Incarceration. (Harvard University Press) “Nicole Fleetwood’s illuminating narrative centers and amplifies the brilliant aesthetic engagements of those most impacted by the carceral regime.
    • Ruth Wilson Gilmore, Golden Gulag: Prisons, Surplus, Crisis, and Opposition in Globalizing California. (University of California Press) “Gilmore’s historical, geographical, and organizational approach provides a useful point of reference for the state’s current efforts to downsize the prison population and relieve overcrowding.
  7. This ambitious volume brings together and assesses all major systematic reviews of the effectiveness of criminological interventions, to draw broad conclusions about what works in policing, corrections, developmental prevention, situational prevention, drug abuse treatments, sentencing and deterrence, and communities.

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