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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New York :Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group,
    UID:
    almahu_9949385039302882
    Format: 1 online resource (xv, 217 pages)
    ISBN: 1351601326 , 9781351601320 , 9781351601313 , 1351601318 , 9781315105505 , 1315105500 , 9781351601306 , 135160130X , 9781138095960 , 1138095966 , 9781138095984 , 1138095982
    Content: "Since the founding of the penitentiary nearly two centuries ago, modifern correctional systems have been marked by the belief that offendifers should not only be punished but also rehabilitated. This uplifting goal, however, involves a very practical challenge: knowing how to save offendifers from a life in crime. In the aftermath of Martinson's 1974 "nothing works doctrine," scholars have made a concerted effort to develop an evidence-based corrections theory and practice to show "what works" to change offendifers. Perhaps the most important contribution to this effort was made by a group of Canadian psychologists, most notably Donald Andrews, James Bonta, and Paul Gendreau, who developed a treatment paradigm called the Risk-Need-Responsivity Model (RNR model), which became the dominant theory of correctional treatment. This approach was more recently challenged by a perspective developed by Tony Ward, Shadd Maruna, and others, called the "Good Lives Model" (GLM). Based in part on desistance research and positive psychology, this model proposes to rehabilitate offendifers by building on the strengths offendifers possess. GLM proponents see the RNR model as a deficit model that fixes dynamic risk factors rather than identifying what offendifers value most and using these positive factors to pull them out of crime. Through a detailed examination of both models' theoretical and correctional frameworks, The Future of Correctional Rehabilitation: Moving Beyond the RNR Model and Good Lives Model Debate probes the extent to which the models offer incompatible or compatible approaches to offendifer treatment, and suggests how to integrate the RNR and GLM approaches to build a new and hopefully more effective vision for offendifer treatment. A foreword by renowned criminologist Francis T. Cullen helps put the material into context. This book will be of much interest to scholars and students interested in correctional rehabilitation as well as practitioners working with offendifers"--Provided by publisher
    Note: Part I. Beyond nothing works -- The rise and fall of the rehabilitative ideal -- Reaffirming rehabilitation -- Part II. The risk-need-responsivity model -- The theoretical foundation of the RNR model -- The principles of effective correctional treatment: theory and technology -- Part III. The good lives model -- The theoretical foundation of the good lives model -- Building good lives through correctional intervention -- Part IV. The future of rehabilitation -- The RNR-GLM debate -- Beyond the RNR-GLM debate: two futures for offender rehabilitation.
    Additional Edition: Print version: ISBN 9781351601320
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Electronic books. ; Electronic books
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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