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Författare: | Priestley Philip
, Vanstone Maurice
| Titel: | Offenders or Citizens? � Readings in rehabilitation | Utgivningsår: | 2010 | Omfång: | 340 sid. | Förlag: | Willan Publishing | ISBN: | 9781843925309 | Produkttyp: | Inbunden | Ämnesord: | Kriminologi
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Pris: 873 SEK exkl. moms  | The punitive prison currently dominates the practice of Anglo-American criminal justice, stigmatising its victims as perpetual ‘offenders’ and failing to change a majority of them for the better. Books of academic ‘readings’ sometimes profess neutrality over the controversies they invigilate. Offenders or Citizens? sits on no such fences, its pages reflect the fiercely partisan nature of the contest between rehabilitation and punishment. Probation, social work, youth justice, law, corrections, criminology, journalism, philosophy, politics, popular culture, psychology, anthropology, and sociology - the voices of participants, professionals, and writers from many realms are all represented in this lively selection. Its aim - to stimulate and furnish a debate about the proper place of rehabilitation within a plural, morally defensible, and effective response to crime.
• The historical roots and early forms of rehabilitation in classical criminology and nineteenth-century philanthropy.
• Modern trends and forms; the neo-punitive revolution of the later twentieth century, the near extinction of rehabilitation, and its survival as a form of subversive activity.
• The future - can rehabilitation be rehabilitated? Building on ‘desistance’ research, evidence-led innovation in methods,and the spread of restorative and community justice, a revived ‘citizen theory’ of rehabilitation and probation is articulated for the twenty-first century.
Offenders or Citizens? provides a broader background to the 'what works' debate and will be required and rewarding reading for students, practitioners, opinion-formers, and policy-makers within criminal justice – all those who have an interest in the promotion of community safety and the rehabilitation of convicted individuals.
Contents
General Introduction
Part 1 - The historical roots and early forms of rehabilitation
Introduction
1 Science, Rewards and Education, Cesare Beccaria
2 The Panopticon, Jeremy Bentham
3 Working in the Police Court, John Augustus
4 Recognizance, Matthew Davenport Hill
5 Recognizance and the suspension of judgement, Edward. W. Cox
6 Adult Probation, William Tallack
7 The blind worship of punishment, Enrico Ferri
8 Crime and Criminals, Clarence Darrow
9 The Positivism of Clarence Darrow, P. Jenkins
10 Work in the courts, Thomas Holmes
11 The individualization of punishment, Raymond Saleilles
12 Reforming criminals, Thomas Holmes
13 The Probation System, Cecil Leeson
14 Working with women, Mrs. Cary
15 Social Clubs for girls, Mrs. Cary
16 Work with children, H. Chinn
17 Difficult cases, C. Rankin
18 The failure of prison and the value of treatment, Mary Gordon
19 The spiritual factor, F. Poulton
20 Principles of a rational penal code, Sheldon Glueck
21 The prison chaplain, Victor Serge
22 Religion in the penitentiary, Philip Priestley
23 Techniques of social work, H. Weiss
24 Some pitfalls for probation, Sheldon Glueck
25 Treatment plans and practice, L. Le Mesurier
26 Social inquiry and treatment plans, R. R. W. Golding
27 The principles of casework, F. P. Biestek
28 Gang-groups, D. Bissell
29 Hostel groups, M. K. McCullough
30 Girl Groups, M. Freeguard
31 Enforcement and therapy, A.W. Hunt
32 Psychotherapy and reality, Melitta Schmideberg
33 The persistent offender, Geoffrey Parkinson
Part 2 - Modern trends and forms
Introduction
34 Humanitarianism and punishment, C. S. Lewis
35 The frying-pan of charitable condescension, Barbara Wootton
36 Faith and Counsellors, Paul Halmos
37 Re-socializing prisoners, K. Berntsen and K. Christiansen
38 The Age of Treatment, Robert Martinson
39 In the Ghetto, Mac Davis
40 The justice model, American Friends Service Committee
41 Task Centred Casework, W. J. Reid and L. Epstein
42 Serving the community, John Harding
43 Extended contact with prisoners, Margaret Shaw
44 McVicar, John McVicar
45 Social Work in the Environment, Martin Davies
46 New Careers, Philip Priestley
47 The effectiveness of sentencing, S.R. Brody
48 Rehabilitation and deviance, Philip Bean
49 A sense of freedom, Jimmy Boyle
50 Sentenced to social work, Malcolm Bryant et al
51 Compulsion and social work, Peter Raynor
52 Non-treatment, Anthony Bottoms and Bill McWilliams
53 Still not working? Ronald Blackburn
54 Induction groups, A.R. Stanley
55 Limits to Pain, Nils Christie
56 Sex Offender Groups, Christine Weaver and Charles Fox
57 Justice, Sanctioning, and the Justice Model, Gray Cavender
58 Offending Behaviour, James McGuire and Philip Priestley
59 Heimler’s Human Social Functioning, Hugh Morley
60 Reasoning and Rehabilitation, Robert Ross et al
61 Does nothing work? Jerome Miller
62 Punishment in Modern Society, David Garland
63 Restorative justice, Martin Wright
64 Good or evil? John Patten
65 The New Penology, Malcolm Feeley and Jonathan Simon
66 Day Training Centres, Maurice Vanstone
67 Groupwork with Women, Marion Jones et al
68 Last Messages from a Fading Star, Brian Caddick
69 Probation Practice… Peter Raynor and Maurice Vanstone
70 Drug treatment: a therapeutic community, Carl Åke Farbring
Part 3 - The future - can rehabilitation be rehabilitated?
Introduction
71 Socialization Through the Life Cycle, Orville G. Brim
72 The Just Community Approach to Corrections, L. Kohlberg et. al
73 Exiting from criminal careers, Thomas Meisenhelder
74 A Re-Examination of Correctional Alternatives, Kevin N. Wright
75 Probation in St. Pauls, Jim Lawson
76 The Rights Model, Edgardo Rotman
77 The Politics of Redress, Willem de Haan
78 Desistance and development, Shadd Maruna
79 Treatment for Substance Abusers, Ron Fagan
80 What works. What doesn’t work. What’s promising., Doris Layton MacKenzie
81 'Punish And Rehabilitate' - Do They Mean Us? Chris Hignett
82 Rethinking God, Ted Grimsrud and Howard Zehr
83 Restorative Justice Values, Processes and Practices, Allison Morris
84 Rethinking What Works with Offenders, Stephen Farrall
85 A Civic Engagement Model of Re-entry, G. Bazemore and J. Stinchcomb
86 American Social Work, Corrections and Restorative Justice, E. J. Gumz
87 The Good Lives Model, Tony Ward and Mark Brown
88 What Works in Prisoner Re-entry? Joan Petersilia
89 Beyond the Prison Paradigm, James Gilligan and Bandy Lee
90 Rehabilitation: headline or footnote? S. Lewis
91 Problem Solving Courts, C. West Huddleston, III et al
92 Strengths-based resettlement, Ros Burnett and Shadd Maruna
93 Staying straight: lessons from ex-offenders, Thomas K. Kenemore
94 The future of rehabilitation, Gwen Robinson and Peter Raynor
95 Programmes for minority ethnic offenders, Patrick Williams
96 Rehabilitation is the moral thing to do, Francis T. Cullen
97 Principles of Problem-Solving Justice, Robert V. Wolf
98 ‘A daft idea’, Rod Morgan
Conclusion
References
Key
Index
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