The need to prevent convicted prisoners and other offenders from reoffending constitutes a major challenge for both criminal justice and penitentiary systems. Reoffending rates are considerable (in many instances they are even high) while the issue is tremendously complicated. Rehabilitation - sometimes described as resocialization, reintegration, or treatment - is an important tool for the prevention of reoffending, but has clearly become less self-evident in many jurisdictions in recent decades. This volume focuses on the value of restoring offenders to a useful life, from the perspectives of prisoners, their family, society, the tax-payer, prison staff and administration, and victims, as well as from a criminological viewpoint. Notwithstanding these actual values of rehabilitation measures, their application alone may not be sufficient to prevent someone from reoffending. This particularly applies to high risk offenders, i.e. those who pose a substantial risk of further serious offending, such as sex offenders, terrorists, and members of organized criminal groups. The book considers measures to deal with high risk offenders during and after their sentence, and the arguments for and against their use. Prevention of Reoffending contains 14 essays written in English language text and 10 essays written in French. The English contributions include: Obligations and Means to Prevent Reoffending: Introduction, Context, and Conclusions * The Value of Rehabilitation to Prisoners * The Value of Rehabilitation to the Prisoner's Family * The Value of Rehabilitation to Society * The Value of Rehabilitation to the Tax-payer * The Value of Rehabilitation to the Prison Administration * The Justification for Taking Measures to Predict Offending/Reoffending and to Manage Risk * The Justification for Taking Measures to Predict Offending/Reoffending and Manage Risk: A Theoretical Perspective. The View of a Human Rights Lawyer * The Relevance of the Risk of Reoffending in Determining the Type and the Length of Sentences: A Comparative Criminal Law Perspective * The "Other" Death Penalty: Life in Prison * Managing the Risk Posed by Offenders after the Expiry of Sentence: The British Experience * Community Measures to Deal with High Risk Offenders at the Periphery of the Justice System * Dealing with High Risk Offenders: General Synthesis and Conclusions * The International Penal and Penitentiary Foundation: History and Purpose (Series: International Penal and Penitentiary Foundation - Vol. 45)
Study Guide to Accompany Introduction to Criminal Justice, Third Edition, by Donald J. Newman, School of Criminal Justice, State University...
United States , 168 U.S. 532 , the Court held that “ [ i ] n criminal trials , in the courts of the United States ... Haynes v . Washington , 373 U.S. 503 . The marked shift to the federal standard in state cases . . . reflects ...
The Police Function: Reprinted from Miller, Dawson, Dix, and Parnas' Cases and Materials on Criminal Justice Administration (second Edition)
Chapter 8 THE EVOLUTION OF OFFENDER ELECTRONIC MONITORING: FROM RADIO SIGNALS TO SATELLITE TECHNOLOGY MATTHEW E. ... As Emma Anderson (2014) reports as part of her NPR discussion on electronic monitoring, “With overcrowded jails and the ...
American System of Criminal Justice: Criminal Justice Series
This book, which is intended to be used as a textbook in an introductory course in criminal justice in America, covers the criminal justice process, the police, the courts, corrections, and the juvenile justice system.
Broad coverage of the facts, uncompromising scholarship, an engaging writing style, and compelling delivery of current events make THE AMERICAN SYSTEM OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE, 13E, International Edition one of the best books available for an in ...
Instructor's Manual for The American System of Criminal Justice
Criminal Justice in America: For University of Wisconsin-Madison
... 354 , 357-359 Bazemore , G. , 225 , 250 , 455 Beasely , Thomas W. , 351-352 Beccaria , C. , 187 Beck , A. , 169 , 189 Beck , A.J. , 286 , 288 , 295 Beck , J.L. , 231 Becker , F. , 190 Becker , G.S. , 188 Becker , H.S. , 309 Becker ...