scholarly journals Professionalising release management for mentally disordered perpetrators: Benefits in terms of recidivism rates—Results from a study within the Austrian prison system

2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 312-320
Author(s):  
Monika Stempkowski
1994 ◽  
Vol 74 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-97 ◽  
Author(s):  
LORI B. GIRSHICK

Wives of prisoners are rarely studied, yet incarceration of a loved one has an impact on the everyday experience of the immediate family. Furthermore, studies since the 1960s have consistently shown that prisoners with more family contact have lower recidivism rates than prisoners with less or no contact. This piece explores the thoughts and experiences of a wife of a prisoner, revealing how her life is affected by incarceration of her husband. Relationship impact, stigma, coping, friendships, visiting, and dealing with the prison system are all examined in this stream-of-consciousness piece as she drives one morning to the prison.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (14) ◽  
pp. 69-79
Author(s):  
Elina Kruze ◽  
Janis Priede

The possibility to achieve successful resocialization of former prisoners back into society is an ongoing public debate, making it challenging for policymakers to implement prisoner rehabilitation programs capable of maintaining the public safety while allocating public funds in the most efficient way. The main aim of this study is to examine what is necessary for an investment in prison system development to be justified. The hypothesis of this study suggests that such investment can be cost-effective by reducing crime and recidivism rates in the long term by ensuring proper rehabilitation of prisoners. Accordingly, this research compares various European countries regarding their imprisonment standards and costs in order to conclude which countries operate in the most effective way and what is crucial to obtain a decrease in the reoffending rates. The key results suggest that it is possible to find a correlation between such variables as the imprisonment costs, incarceration rates and the recidivism rates. It is possible to draw parallels between the amount of money countries spend on one prisoner a year and the recidivism rates of such countries, suggesting that the reoffending rates can be reduced by increasing the amount of resources allocated for the improvement of prisoner’s lives. Furthermore, such an investment should not only take the form of establishment of a proper environment for successful rehabilitation – prisoners should be provided with education and work possibilities to prepare them for life outside the prison walls. Moreover, the study highlights the need for post-release support mechanisms capable of re-integrating former convicts back into society, since such mechanisms could reduce the likelihood of re-offending.  


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott Ploharz ◽  
Patricia Dirks ◽  
Logan Zaring ◽  
Britani Delbo ◽  
Shauna Sugomoto ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 32 (5) ◽  
pp. 272-275
Author(s):  
Thomas J. Farrell

Amendments to the compassionate release provisions of the federal First Step Act and Second Chance Acts provide some opportunity for release for elderly and infirm federal inmates. This article examines the reentry successes of three Pennsylvania state inmates, all convicted of homicide, who won their release as re-sentenced juvenile lifers or through commutation. The author came to know them through a reentry group affiliated with a Pittsburgh university. Their success and scholarship about the low recidivism rates for violent offenders over the age fifty suggest that the criminal justice system should abolish the imposition of life sentences. More than avoid recidivism, each of these returning citizens has made positive contributions to their communities, both in and out of prison. They are working, obtaining educations, engaging in charitable work and political advocacy, and writing about their experiences. Their example and their description of many similarly-situated older inmates still in prison teach that society should not rest the argument for their release solely on compassion and pity. Rather, older inmates have learned coping skills that can help restore the communities that their crimes harmed and that they were taken from during their incarceration. For these reasons, the author suggests that prison sentences generally should provide for release after an inmate serves twenty-five years and attains the age of fifty.


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