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When Prisoners Come Home: Parole and Prisoner Reentry
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In this paper, a profile of returning prisoners is presented, along with a discussion of the changing nature of Parole Supervision and Services, and the role of the victim's role in prisoner reentry.Abstract:
Preface 1. Introduction and Overview 2. Who's Coming Home? A Profile of Returning Prisoners 3. The Origins and Evolution of Modern Parole 4. The Changing Nature of Parole Supervision and Services 5. How We Help: Preparing Inmates for Release 6. How We Hinder: Legal and Practical Barriers to Reintegration 7. Revolving Door Justice: Inmate Release and Recidivism 8. The Victim's Role in Prisoner Reentry 9. What to Do? Reforming Parole and Reentry Practices 10. Conclusions: When Punitive Policies Backfire Afterwordread more
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Die Rehabilitation von Straftätern
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Meta-Analysis, Moderators, and Treatment Effectiveness: The Importance of Digging Deeper for Evidence of Program Integrity
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that meta-analysts need to go beyond what can be found in such printed reports and to instead investigate more systematically the treatment programs themselves for additional information.
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Gualitative education for prisoners: a panacea to effective rehabilitation and integration into the society
Grace Omoni,S Ijeh +1 more
TL;DR: It was recommended that prisoners should be given qualitative and vocational education for rehabilitation and integration and there was no relationship between prisoners’ rehabilitation and formal education.
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Impact of an intervention for recently released homeless offenders on self-reported re-arrest at 6 and 12 months
Adeline Nyamathi,Benissa E. Salem,David Farabee,Elizabeth A. H. Hall,Sheldon X. Zhang,Mark Faucette,Doug Bond,Kartik Yadav +7 more
TL;DR: Findings revealed that positive predictors of re-arrest at 12 months included having received social support from drug users and non-drug users, as well as having used marijuana at least once a week prior to their most recent incarceration.