Reimagining Rehabilitation: Beyond the Individual

‘Reimagining Rehabilitation: Beyond the Individual’ is published in June 2018 and written by Lol Burke, Steve Collett and Fergus McNeill. This book aims to make the case for and provide some of the resources necessary to reimagine rehabilitation for twenty-first-century criminal justice. Outlining an approach to rehabilitation which takes into account wider democratic processes, political structures and mechanisms of resource allocation, the authors develop a new model of rehabilitation comprising four forms – personal, legal, social and moral.

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Enforcement of Offender Supervision in Europe

The book ‘Enforcement of Offender Supervision’  by Niamh MaGuire and Miranda Boone provides a comparative analysis of the process of breach across ten different European jurisdictions. The book focused on the breach processes that follow non-compliance with a community sanction or measure and non-compliance with conditional early release from prison. It is informed by the research activities of the COST Action IS1106 on Offender Supervision in Europe, particularly the Action’s work on developing new comparative methodologies to examine the process of decision-making involved in the breaching of offenders for non-compliance. CEP spoke to the authors about their research and findings.

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The Oxford Handbook of Offender Decision Making

The Oxford Handbook of Offender Decision Making is a book written by researchers Wim Bernasco, Jean-Louis van Gelder and Henk Elffers. It provides reviews of the main paradigms in offender decision-making, such as rational choice theory and dual-process theory.

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Why punish? An Introduction to the Philosophy of Punishment

Why punish? is an attempt to show the value of combining the insights of social sciences with those of philosophy in trying to understand punishment. Subtitled An Introduction to the Philosophy of Punishment, the book takes no particular philosophical position but is guided by a definition from the Harvard philosopher, Michael Sandel:

‘Philosophy is reflecting critically on the way things are. That includes reflecting critically on social and political and economic arrangements. It always intimates the possibility that things could be other than they are. And better.’

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Parole and Beyond: International Experiences of Life After Prison

This book, written by Ioan Durnescu and Ruth Armstrong, provides an assessment of contemporary international knowledge about the experiences of life after release from prison. For over 100 years people leaving prison have been supervised by probation services, but little has been written about how those who are supervised experience this process, or how this process influences experiences post-release.

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European Journal of Probation

European Journal of Probation is a peer review academic journal aiming to promote comparative research on probation and community justice across Europe. European Journal of Probation was launched 1 April 2009 and was until 2011 a biannual e-journal. From 2011 onward the journal has three issues per year. The Editorial Board includes well known academics and criminal justice professionals from twelve different countries. The journal is now published in partnership with SAGE Publishing.

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Women in Prison: The Bangkok Rules and Beyond

Women are a minority in prison. Currently 6.8% of the world prison population is female, but this number is rapidly growing. Due to the relatively low number of female inmates, prison policies have traditionally developed in response to the behavior of men. However, women in prison have different needs. For example, needs related to: pregnancy, breastfeeding, raising children, hygiene, health and prison security. In order to respond to these specific needs, the UN General Assembly adopted the Bangkok Rules (2010). The Bangkok Rules have three focal points. Apart from responding to the specific needs of women in prison, the rules also focus on the protection of children and the prevention of (sexual) abuse. In addition, the Bangkok Rules promote non-custodial sentences for convicted females.

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Probation and Politics Academic Reflections from Former Practitioners

This book is a collection of essays by a unique group of authors about the political destruction of the probation service in England and Wales. All of them are probation officers turned academics, with a collective scholarly output that is both prodigious and distinguished. They address the history of probation, its underlying values and working methods, and the way it has been systematically dismantled by successive political administrations. The book offers essential reading for those interested in broadening their understanding of the probation service and its vital role in rehabilitation. In addition it makes a compelling case for the reinstatement of an evidence-based probation service as the primary criminal justice agency concerned with helping people who come before the courts to become contributing citizens. A lively and engrossing read, it is destined to be invaluable to policy makers, social science theorists and commentators, as well as scholars of criminology and the justice system, and all those who work in it.

For more information or ordering, you can visit the website of Palgrave McMillan.

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