Recidivism

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    Educating Ofenders in Harris County

    Introduction For offenders reentering the community the transition can be very difficult. Offenders face hardships in securing employment and housing to receiving adequate treatment for mental and physical illnesses and substance abuse. The number of offenders reentering society from prison and jail is steadily increasing yearly. States are diligently working to identify methods to help offenders successfully reintegrate into society. Some initiatives available in Harris County, TX include prison

    Words: 2506 - Pages: 11

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    Social Servants.

    A Re-entry Programs is defined as any service or program which provides incarcerated individuals with the opportunity to reinsert themselves back into the community after serving time in jail or prison. Only inmates with a good record may obtain access to this type of service even though it is seen as a form of rehabilitation. These specialized programs provide offenders with employment, education, health and social services, including access to housing, work, health care, counseling and job training

    Words: 1389 - Pages: 6

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    Challenges of Being an Advocate and Mediator

    Challenges of Being an Advocate and Mediator Challenges of Being an Advocate and Mediator Many challenges are presented when working as a mediator and an advocate in the human services field. Advocacy and Mediation require a person to remain neutral in order to help individuals resolve their issues. The roles of advocates and mediators also come with limitations which if not followed, could lead them to have serious legal problems. In this essay the writer will present the ethical, moral

    Words: 875 - Pages: 4

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    Prison

    local problem of drug imprisonment 3 Methodology 4 Finding 1: Treatment can be less expensive than a term of imprisonment 5 Finding 2: Treatment can be cost effective 6 Finding 3: Treatment can reduce substance abuse and recidivism while building communities 9 Finding 4: Promising treatment models exist in Maryland and around the country 11 Maryland: Break The Cycle The Correctional Options Program (COP) Drug Courts: Maryland and the National Perspective California’s

    Words: 8236 - Pages: 33

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    Working with Juvenile Defenders

    What Works with Juvenile Offenders Juvenile Offenders are categorized differently than their adult counterparts for a variety of reasons. The primary reason is that as an offender who is not yet an adult, they are still considered a protected class due to their age and the concern of disrupting their rights to council and the rights of their parents to help dictate the events in their lives. Over the past few decades there have been several studies completed correlating the quantitative analysis

    Words: 3477 - Pages: 14

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    Incarceration

    Running head: ALTERNATIVE SOLUTIONS TO INCARCERATION Alternative Solutions to Incarceration Meral Daniel Southern New Hampshire University Alternative Solutions to Incarceration Incarceration is the result after a crime is committed by an individual and has a number of objectives. Primarily, it is intended to keep persons who have committed a crime under secure control and to punish them by depriving them of their liberty. Imprisonment keeps

    Words: 592 - Pages: 3

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    Truth and Sentencing Debate

    Truth-in -Sentencing Debate Truth in sentencing law deter crime Truth in sentencing refers to a range of sentencing practices that aim to reduce the uncertainty about the length of time that offenders must serve in prison. During the 1990s, throughout the states and in the federal government there was considerable legislative activity related to truth in sentencing. By 1999, 41 states and the District of Columbia had passed laws or implemented some form of truth in sentencing, but the forms

    Words: 692 - Pages: 3

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    Reentry

    training, decent educational programming, help finding housing assistance, and behavioral/health treatment. Nonetheless, executing reentry programs in a correctional setting is challenging, predominantly in jails, where stays are naturally short and recidivism rate remains high. Preparing offenders for a successful transition back to their families and reentry to the community is the primary focus of such community reentry services. The community has a responsibility to make it possible for the formerly

    Words: 1749 - Pages: 7

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    Why Rehabilitation

    Why Rehabilitation Karmella Moten Kaplan University The penal system today is a multi-million dollar industry, with about 1,325 state and 84 federal prisons the entire country has the capacity to incarcerate its criminal population. The past three decades will be remembered as a time of overwhelming imprisonment, because of the concerns with community protection reaching an outstanding high, with the firm drug laws and strict repeat offenders putting more people behind bars. Incarceration, however

    Words: 913 - Pages: 4

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    The Purpose of Incarceration

    and offenders and also the social and fiscal impact on our society. The Classical School of Criminology has proposed that punishment is used to create deterrence and the Positive School of Criminology uses the practice of rehabilitation to reduce recidivism.” (http://www.associatedcontent.com) The strongest goal of incarceration is rehabilitation. The ability to successfully be able to reform offenders to become a working part of society is important. If offenders are not given resources to help

    Words: 1143 - Pages: 5

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