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Journal ArticleDOI

The Risk Principle in Action: What Have We Learned From 13,676 Offenders and 97 Correctional Programs?

TLDR
In this paper, the authors investigated how adherence to the risk principle by targeting offenders who are higher risk and varying length of stay and services by level of risk affects program effectiveness in reducing recidivism.
Abstract
Over the recent past there have been several meta-analyses and primary studies that support the importance of the risk principle. Oftentimes these studies, particularly the meta-analyses, are limited in their ability to assess how the actual implementation of the risk principle by correctional agencies affects effectiveness in reducing recidivism. Furthermore, primary studies are typically limited to the assessment of one or two programs, which again limits the types of analyses conducted. This study, using data from two independent studies of 97 correctional programs, investigates how adherence to the risk principle by targeting offenders who are higher risk and varying length of stay and services by level of risk affects program effectiveness in reducing recidivism. Overall, this research indicates that for residential and nonresidential programs, adhering to the risk principle has a strong relationship with a program’s ability to reduce recidivism.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Effectiveness of Correctional Rehabilitation: A Review of Systematic Reviews

TL;DR: The effects of correctional interventions on recidivism have important public safety implications when offenders are released from probation or prison as discussed by the authors, and hundreds of studies have been conducted on those effects, some investigating punitive approaches and some investigating rehabilitation treatments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Correctional Policy for Offenders with Mental Illness: Creating a New Paradigm for Recidivism Reduction

TL;DR: This article uses research to evaluate the effectiveness of current interventions, and the larger viability of psychiatric, criminological, and social psychological models of the link between mental illness and criminal justice involvement, and proposes three priorities for advancing research, articulating policy, and improving practice.
Journal ArticleDOI

Community-oriented policing to reduce crime, disorder and fear and increase satisfaction and legitimacy among citizens: a systematic review

TL;DR: In this article, a broad range of databases, websites, and journals were searched to identify eligible studies that measured pre-post changes in outcomes in treatment and comparison areas following the implementation of policing strategies that involved community collaboration or consultation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reconstructing the Risk-Need-Responsivity model: A theoretical elaboration and evaluation

TL;DR: The RNR model is reconstructed in light of this analysis, essentially arguing that there are at least three components to any rehabilitation theory: primary aims, values and principles, etiological and methodological assumptions, and practice implications.
References
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Peer ReviewDOI

Correctional Counseling and Rehabilitation

TL;DR: This book discusses the challenges faced by the Correctional Counselor in the prison setting, as well as some of the approaches taken to address these challenges.
Journal ArticleDOI

Making the Next Step: Using Evaluability Assessment to Improve Correctional Programming

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe Gendreau and Andrews's Correctional Program Assessment Inventory (CPAI) as one example of an evaluability assessment tool that is designed to ascertain how well programs are meeting certain principles of effective intervention.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recidivism among Released Federal Prisoners: Salient Factor Score and Five-Year Follow-Up

TL;DR: The salient factor score is an actuarial device used by the United States Parole Commission as an aid in assessing a federal prisoner's likelihood of recidivism after release as mentioned in this paper.
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