جزییات کتاب
The issue of resettling ex-prisoners and ex-offenders into the community has become an increasingly important one on both sides of the Atlantic. In the USA the former Attorney General Janet Reno identified the issue as 'one of the most pressing problems we face as a nation' in view of the massive prison population and the rapid increase in rates of incarceration, while in the UK it has become an increasingly important issue for similar reasons, and the subject of recent reports by HM Inspectorate of Prisons and HM Inspectorate of Probation, as well as from the Social Exclusion Unit of the Home. Read more... Content: Cover; Copyright Page; Contents; List of figures and tables; Foreword; Notes on contributors; Part I Desistance Theory and Reintegration Practice; 1 Ex-offender reintegration: theory and practice; 2 Reintegration and restoratvie justice: towards a theory and practice of informal social control and support; 3 Social capital and offender reintegration: making probation desistance focused; Part II Methodological Considerations; 4 Connecting desistance and recidivism: measuring changes in criminality over the lifespan. 5 Somewhere between persistence and desistance: the intermittency of criminal careersPart III Applied Research on Desistance; 6 Jail or the army: does military service facilitate desistance from crime?; 7 To reoffend or not to reoffend? The ambivalence of convicted property offenders; 8 Desistance from crime: is it different for women and girls?; Part IV Desistance-focused Reintegration Research; 9 Beating the perpetual incarceration machine: overcoming structural impediments to re-entry; 1. Abstract: The issue of resettling ex-prisoners and ex-offenders into the community has become an increasingly important one on both sides of the Atlantic. In the USA the former Attorney General Janet Reno identified the issue as 'one of the most pressing problems we face as a nation' in view of the massive prison population and the rapid increase in rates of incarceration, while in the UK it has become an increasingly important issue for similar reasons, and the subject of recent reports by HM Inspectorate of Prisons and HM Inspectorate of Probation, as well as from the Social Exclusion Unit of the Home