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1. Criminal Rehabilitation - Criminal Recidivism
A new look at crime and punishment, criminal rehabilitation, recidivism rates, prison education our astronomical crime rate, incarceration policies, and more. to work, in prison education and criminal rehabilitation, or with everything that complete criminal rehabilitation entails? Youll find federal or state facilities that are called
http://www.crimrehab.com/ACP.shtml
America's Crime Problem
A shameful crime rate, incredibly large prison population, and criminal recidivism rates around 70%:
Home
Introduction and Explanation of Website
The Book

Going Straight: An ex-convict/psychologist tells why and how
America's Crime Problem

Why us? Facts, myths, and ideas
Free
(and maybe fun) Stuff to Read
Articles and papers by and about Dr. Fauteck
Comments

What others have said about Going Straight...
Links
Useful Places to Visit Author Bio Bad and Good, Then and Now Contact Email, Snail Mail, and Phone
Why us?:
A Quick Overview:
  • The USA has a higher percentage of its citizens behind bars than any other nation. Our crime rate is higher than that of any other advanced nation. Among the leading industrialized nations our murder rate is 3-1/2 times higher than the second place nation, Italy. The majority of persons released from prison in the US - estimates run as high as 70% - are convicted of new crimes within five years.
Why Us?

2. Criminal Justice Resources Resources: Juvenile Justice
New Lessons in education and Delinquency Justice Articles from criminal Justice Magazine rehabilitation in the juvenile court system. The CJJ report profiles four facilities
http://www.lib.msu.edu/harris23/crimjust/juvenile.htm
CRIMINAL JUSTICE RESOURCES
Juvenile Justice Web Sites Articles and Publications Source Links with Annotations Web Sites
  • About.Com Juvenile Crime Page
  • About.Com Juvenile Crime-Punishment Statistics Page
  • About.Com Juvenile Punishment Page
  • American Bar Association's Juvenile Justice Center ...
  • Virginia Youth Violence Project Articles and Publications
  • Abandoned in the Back Row:
    New Lessons in Education and Delinquency Prevention
  • Adolescent Violence: A View from the Streets
  • Ain't No Place Anybody Would Want to Be: ...
  • Youth Violence Prevention Source Links With Annotations Abandoned in the Back Row:
    New Lessons in Education and Delinquency Prevention
    Coalition for Juvenile Justice 2001 Annual Report

    http://www.juvjustice.org/publications/2001ar.html

    Abandoned in the Back Row reveals that youth who receive an inadequate education or do not succeed in school often enter the juvenile court system. Consequently, children with learning or emotional disabilities are highly susceptible to delinquency. More than 35 percent of students with learning disabilities drop out of school, twice the rate of students without learning disabilities. Youth that drop out of school are three and a half times more likely to be arrested than high school graduates.
    (Last checked 01/07/04) About.Com Juvenile Crime Page
  • 3. Criminal Justice Resources Resources: Corrections
    and rehabilitation Page Secure Correctional facilities facilities. Juvenile Boot Camps Lessons Learned. Juvenile Correctional education A Time for Change. Juvenile Delinquents in the
    http://www.lib.msu.edu/harris23/crimjust/correct.htm
    CRIMINAL JUSTICE RESOURCES:
    Corrections Quotes Web Sites Articles, Publications, and Reports Annotated Entries with Web Links Quotes "The number of Americans locked up has quadrupled in the last 25 years to almost 2 million, as states used longer sentences to get tough on crime. In Michigan, the prison population has increased almost five times since 1975 to nearly 50,000 ... .Nationwide, an increasing number of released inmatestwo of three in 1994committed another serious crime within three years. In Michigan, of the 7,701 inmates paroled in 1995, 40 percent returned within four years for either a parole violation or new sentence. That's up from 26 percent of the inmates paroled in 1991." Source: Detroit Free Press (10 Jun 2002): p.8 secA. "The average cost to keep one person incarcerated for a year in 1992 was about $25,000, and the average cost to keep one person on probation for a year was $5,000. When we multiply by the number of people under each form of corrections, the total costs are about $47 billion per year. Add to that the costs of law enforcement and the total climbs to about $71 billion a year. And this does not include the costs of courts and prosecution, nor the costs of building prisons and jails...." Source: U.S. Criminal Justice Interest Groups : Institutional Profiles. Westport, Ct. : Greenwood Press, 1993. "The direct costs of incarceration range from about a thousand dollars a month for a minimim security, dormatory-style lock-up with no siginficant counseling, to about three thousand dollars monthly for a high security suicide-watch, and the indirect costs to the community are even higher. When the person who is imprisoned needs mental health services, add about $50 per hour to these costs up to $100 thousand per year. On average, it would be much cheaper to give a person a year in college than a year in a juvenile hall, jail, or prison." Source: Friends Committee on Legislation Education Fund

    4. U.S. Catholic Bishops - Social Development & World Peace
    good is undermined by criminal behavior that threatens the those who work in correctional facilities. This is at crime prevention, rehabilitation, education efforts, substance abuse
    http://www.nccbuscc.org/sdwp/criminal.htm
    Issued by USCCB, November 15, 2000
    Order Copies of This Statement
    Responsibility, Rehabilitation, and Restoration:
    A Catholic Perspective
    on Crime and Criminal Justice
    A Statement of the Catholic Bishops of the United States
    We are still a long way from the time when our conscience can be certain of having done everything possible to prevent crime and to control it effectively so that it no longer does harm and, at the same time, to offer to those who commit crimes a way of redeeming themselves and making a positive return to society. If all those in some way involved in the problem tried to . . . develop this line of thought, perhaps humanity as a whole could take a great step forward in creating a more serene and peaceful society.

    Pope John Paul II, July 9, 2000
    Table of Contents
    • Introduction
      Crime and the Catholic Community
      Some Dimensions of Crime and Punishment in the United States
      Victims of Crime in the United States
      Punishment in the United States
      Characteristics of the Inmate Population
      Detention of Immigrants
      Offenders and Treatment
    • Scriptural, Theological, and Sacramental Heritage

    5. CrimNotes Newsletter - FSU Criminology And Criminal Justice
    CrimNotes, newsletter of the School of Criminology and criminal Justice at Florida State University. of juvenile detention education facilities throughout the state Joel DeVolentine in Journal of Offender rehabilitation.
    http://www.criminology.fsu.edu/newsletter/fall2000.htm
    C RIM N OTES
    Volume 30: Issue 1
    Homecoming Edition: Fall, 2000 Dean's Corner: Daniel Maier-Katkin I am writing to you from the new offices of the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice in beautiful Hecht House. The School has been moved to a very comfortable and attractive new setting with more spacious offices, good facilities for graduate students and an elegant reading room. I hope that many of you will be able to come by and visit and see how much progress the School has been making. We continue to be a popular major; with more than 1300 undergraduates currently enrolled. There are almost 100 Master's and Ph.D. students in the School, and the most recent rankings of graduate programs ranked us third in the nation. As you will see when you read this edition of CrimNotes , the faculty continues to be actively engaged in top level scholarship, and the School's research program is probably the most extensive and best funded of any criminal justice program in the world. Professor Tom Blomberg, who many of you know, has recently stepped into the role of Associate Dean and has been doing a great job providing leadership to the School's instructional programs. Tom is also directing a large scale evaluation of the quality of education services for adjudicated delinquents in Florida. The School, under the leadership of Professor Bruce Bullington, has also taken over the publication of The Journal of Drug Issues , and Professor Bill Doerner has taken on the role of editor of the American Journal of Criminal Justice

    6. ABLE - Association For Better Living And Education
    a criminal situation criminal rehabilitation program in which inmates are participating in more than 400 correctional facilities around and provides a rehabilitation program for both
    http://www.able.org/help_criminal.html
    Donate Now
    Become a Member of ABLE

    Support through Volunteering
    Help someone you know with:
    Criminon
    Criminon addresses the underlying causes of criminality and provides a rehabilitation program for both juvenile and adult offenders so they learn the need for honest and moral behavior, as well as skills to lead a productive life in society.
    For more information, call:
    CRIMINON INTERNATIONAL
    criminoninfo@criminon.org

    Enter your email address below and click submit.
    E-mail:
    I would also like to receive ABLE's magazine: TRADEMARK INFORMATION Contact ABLE at ableinfo@able.org or 323.960.3530 About Us l Applied Scholastics l Narconon l The Way to Happiness l Criminon l News l Bookstore l Glossary l Contact l Home

    7. SPECIAL EDUCATION IN CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES
    Special education in the criminal justice system. model of delinquency prevention and offender rehabilitation. Special education in the most restrictive
    http://www.edjj.org/Publications/pub05_01_00.html
    Special Education in Correctional Facilities More than one in three youths who enter correc-tional facilities have previously received special education ser-vices, a considerably higher percentage of youths with disabilities than is found in public elementary and secondary schools (Leone, 1997). Under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), youths with disabilities in correctional facilities are entitled to special education and related services. Providing appropriate services for these students, however, can be extremely challenging. Several issues have been identified as having an impact on the pro-vision of appropriate special education services in correctional facilities, including transience of the student population, conflict-ing organizational goals for security and rehabilitation, shortages of adequately prepared personnel, and limited interagency coordination. This module synthesizes available information on youths with disabilities in correctional facilities and efforts to provide this population with a free appropriate public education (FAPE). The first section describes the number and characteristics of incarcerated youths with disabilities. The second section portrays special education services in correctional facilities. The third section discusses particular challenges associated with the provision of services in correctional facilities, and the fourth reports results for incarcerated youths with disabilities.

    8. LCC Online
    Family Service Agencies; criminal Justice System; Social Work Agencies. education System; Child and Youth Care facilities; rehabilitation Services.
    http://www.lethbridgecollege.ab.ca/programs/fasd.shtml

    Career Opportunities
    Admissions Your Investment Curriculum ... For More Information Visit the
    website!
    Learn to offer support to people affected by prenatal exposure to alcohol or drugs. Our intensive 22-week Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) program will enhance your skills and prepare you to work with people who have suffered irreversible brain damage. At the end of the program, you receive a Credential of Academic Achievement that qualifies you to use your comprehensive understanding of FASD to help people affected by this disorder overcome obstacles in their lives.
    Our Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder program will prepare you for work in a wide range of fields, including:
    • Family Service Agencies Criminal Justice System Social Work Agencies Education System Child and Youth Care Facilities Rehabilitation Services

    New students are accepted full time into the FASD program in the Fall (September) term. Qualified applicants may be admitted into programs outside of normal intakes. Interested applicants are considered on an individual basis by the Program Leader for acceptance into a program in an alternative or modified format. Academic Requirements
    An Alberta High School Diploma or equivalent with a minimum of 60% in English 30 or 70% in English 33 or a previous certificate and/or diploma in a related field (eg: Child and Youth Care, Early Childhood Education, Nursing, Criminal Justice, Rehabilitation Services, Special Needs Teacher Assistant, Education or Social Work). Credits from previous programs may receive advanced credit.

    9. Facilities Services
    Allied Health Sciences. rehabilitation Counseling. Social Work. criminal Justice. Accreditation Review Committee on the education of Physicians Assistants. Belk.
    http://www.ecu.edu/facility_serv/accreds.htm

    Facilities Services Main
    Contact Us Updated: July 31, 2003 East Carolina University Accreditation Planning Sheet Accreditations Building School Department Contact Person Telephone Number Date of Last Review Years Between Review Next Scheduled Review Type National Kitchen and Bath Association Rivers Human Environmental Sciences Interior Design Dr. Karla Hughes, Dean September 2003 June 2006 Site Visit American Dietetic Association Rivers Human Environmental Sciences Dietetics Program/Food Lab Dr. Karla Hughes, Dean February 10, 2003 Spring 2008 Site Visit American Council for Construction Education Rawl Industry and Technology Construction Management Robert Desmond, Dean Site Visit National Environmental Health Science and Protection Accreditation Rawl Industry and Technology Construction Management Robert Desmond, Dean

    10. Education & Assistance Corporation
    that arise in supported housing facilities in Suffolk and result in the successful rehabilitation of participants abuse is related to their criminal activity.
    http://www.eacinc.org/programs4.htm

    HOME

    ABOUT EAC

    EAC in the NEWS

    EMPLOYMENT
    ...
    LOCATIONS

    PROGRAMS
    SUPPORT EAC

    VOLUNTEER

    CONTACT EAC
    Programs (Listed Alphabetically ) Page 4 of 4 PREVIOUS NEXT CLICK GRAY BAR TO RETURN TO TOP
    SUFFOLK COUNTY CHILD ADVOCACY CENTER
    The EAC Suffolk County Child Advocacy Center provides a safe, neutral, child-oriented environment for the coordinated investigation of child physical and sexual abuse cases. The Center opened in 1997, and serves up to 300 children annually. SUPPORTED HOUSING MEDIATION PROGRAM The Supported Housing Mediation Program is designed to resolve disputes and concerns that arise in supported housing facilities in Suffolk County. The program operates under the auspices of EAC's Community Mediation Center. SUITED FOR SUCCESS The objective of the Suited for Success Program is to provide EAC clients with appropriate interview attire at no charge. Suited For Success was implemented in 2001 to meet the needs of men and women who are returning to the workforce or entering the job market for the first time.

    11. WPA-programs And Services
    rehabilitation CENTER The Family rehabilitation Program helps women involved in the criminal justice system HIV education Workshops Offered at all facilities
    http://www.wpaonline.org/WEBSITE/services.htm
    Select A Link WPA sitemap WPA contact information Current newsletter online History of WPA CRIMINAL JUSTICE RESOURCES Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics Resources for Girls in the Juvenile Justice System NY Correction History Society Women Offenders, Bureau of Justice Statistics (1999) Violations of the Human Rights of Women in Custody U.S. Sentencing Commission Correctional Agencies Council of Juvenile Corrections Administrators American Correctional Association (ACA) American Probation and Parole Association (APPA) Child Welfare League of America Bureau of the Census Drug Enforcement Administration Federal Bureau of Investigation Fedworld Information Network United Nations Crime and Justice Information Network U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) Bureau of Prisons National Institute of Corrections Office of Justice Programs .....Bureau of Justice Assistance .....Bureau of Justice Statistics .....Corrections Program Office .....National Institute of Justice .....Office for Victims of Crime .....National Center for Victims of Crime .....Violence Against Women Office National Archive of Criminal Justice Data National Criminal Justice Reference Service (NCJRS) U.S. House of Representatives

    12. Heinous Crime
    be used for the education and rehabilitation of the not for reduction in the criminal s sentence. to the general public and educational facilities in order to
    http://www005.upp.so-net.ne.jp/yama24/crime.htm
    Miscellaneous Impressions
    Heinous Crime
    uploaded October 9, 2003
    top page
    Japanese Edition
    Heinous Crime
    Prevention We are being annoyed by the increase of heinous crimes in Japan. On TV, I recently saw a young man asking adults the reason why murder is bad. A few adults hesitated at answering him and another replied that "Murder is not necessarily bad." We cannot keep our society stable without the severe punishment of the murder. First of all we, adults, have to definitely recognize the necessity of the punishment. Next we have to convince young people that the severe rules are necessary for our society. Before children begin to think why it is bad, we must teach them that murder is the worst deed in the world. I think the reason should be taught after they become schoolchildren. I suppose that the young man, who asked about murder, has never been taught about it by their parents. The Nihon Keizai Shinbun newspaper (Aug. 19, 2003) reported that The Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology began to make up for the decline of the ability of parental education. The education courses, which were prepared for the pregnant woman and her husband, and for the parents of the child who will reach school age soon, have already started. On the next year, the child-care course, which was prepared for the parents of adolescents, is planned to double and the establishment of the child-care course for the high school students, who become parents in the near future, was planned.

    13. University Of Cincinnati - Undergraduate Programs
    opportunities in parole programs, rehabilitation facilities, detention centers who continue their education and earn advanced degrees in criminal justice tend
    http://www.uc.edu/programs/viewprog.asp?progid=1791

    14. CEO Jobs -
    the Massachusetts criminal justice system and regulations of correctional facilities. counseling, counseling education, rehabilitation, rehabilitation counseling
    http://ceo.hrd.state.ma.us/ceo.nsf/0/3dad0b0307543ee985256e9200685df5?OpenDocume

    15. Criminal Justice Q&A
    Contact your school s special education department and system Identification, prevalence, adjustment, and rehabilitation. encounter the criminal justice system
    http://www.thearc.org/faqs/crimqa.html
    People with Mental Retardation in the Criminal Justice System
    by Leigh Ann Davis How many people with mental retardation are in the criminal justice system? Do people with mental retardation commit crimes more often than people without this disability? What crimes are people with mental retardation usually charged with committing? What disadvantages do people with mental retardation face in the criminal justice system? As more people with mental retardation move out of institutions and into the community, their susceptibility to becoming involved in the criminal justice system as a victim, witness or suspect of a crime may increase dramatically. Individuals with this disability are frequently used by other criminals to assist in law-breaking activities without understanding their involvement in a crime or the consequences of their involvement. They may also have a deep need to be accepted and may agree to help with criminal activities in order to gain friendship. Many individuals unintentionally give "misunderstood responses" to officers, which increases their vulnerability to arrest, incarceration and possibly execution, even if they committed no crime (Perske, 1991). Some common responses from those with mental retardation that may effect their ability to protect their rights during police contact include the following. The person may:
    • not want disability to be recognized (and try to cover it up) not understand rights (but pretend to understand) not understand commands be overwhelmed by police presence

    16. Drug Treatment In The Criminal Justice System - Factsheet - Drug Facts
    Drug education, 12,002. Communitybased treatment and rehabilitation services are provided in concert with criminal justice sanctions and procedures
    http://www.whitehousedrugpolicy.gov/publications/factsht/treatment/
    Cocaine Drug Data Summary Drug-Related Crime Drug Treatment in the Criminal Justice System Drug Use Trends Gamma Hydroxybutyrate (GHB) Heroin Inhalants ...
    Drug Facts Home >>

    Drug Treatment in the Criminal
    Justice System
    March 2001

    PDF Version
    (96 KB) Background Incarceration Costs Criminal Justice Treatment Needs Treatment Modalities ... Credits
    As part of ongoing research, the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) Drug Policy Information Clearinghouse has prepared this fact sheet to summarize correctional system statistics, research, and drug treatment information, as well as information regarding ongoing projects addressing drug abuse treatment in the criminal justice system. Background Additionally, 98,913 juveniles (9% of whom were drug offenders) were incarcerated in public or private juvenile facilities for nonstatus offenses. Drug offenders accounted for 21% (236,800) of the State prison population in 1998, up from 6% (19,000) in 1980, and 59% (55,984) of the Federal prison population in 1998, up from 25% (4,749) in 1980. Also, in 1998, an estimated 26% (152,000) of all inmates under local supervision were incarcerated for drug offenses.

    17. RehabNZ / Criminal Rehabilitation Rehabilitating Hardened Criminals And Drug Add
    Criminon The Way Back The criminal College, By L. Ron Hubbard An education. As the first step toward rehabilitation, these give inmates knowledge of right and
    http://www.rehabnz.co.nz/pages/criminal-rehab.html
    RehabNZ Site Map Criminal Rehabilitation
    Criminon addresses the underlying causes of criminality and provides a rehabilitation program for both juvenile and adult offenders so they learn the need for honest and moral behavior, as well as skills to lead a productive life in society. Criminon President Values Education
    Studytechnology

    Drug Rehabilitation
    ... Criminon
    Locking up Addicts Is there another choice? What is Criminon Penal Code by L.Ron Hubbard Criminon Centres World Wide Criminon Starter Package
    With 60 to 80 percent reductions in recidivism rates common among Criminon graduates, the program is taking effective measures to return to our communities not hardened criminals primed to commit further anti-social acts, but truly rehabilitated men and women who are able to contribute to the improvement and productivity of society Why Have Our Prisons Entered A Deadly Spiral
    Criminon delivers its courses in three different ways, all depending on the needs of each particular institution or community.

    18. RehabNZ / Narconon Drug Rehabilitation.Ongoing Program Evaluation Presentation B
    to stay off of drugs, criminal behavior and and governmental support for drug rehabilitation play important education and Employment The educational level was
    http://www.rehabnz.co.nz/pages/narconon-research.html
    Glossary Narconon Education Materials Agent Orange Natural Tranquilizer ... On-line Bookstore The Narconon Drug Rehabilitation Program: Ongoing Program Evaluation
    Program Description

    Human Detoxification Conference Archives

    September 11-12, 1997
    Presentation by Shelley L. Beckman. Ph.D
    International Conference on Human Detoxification
    Introduction
    During the past three years, there has been an ongoing evaluation of the Narconon program at two Narconon facilities in the United States. These facilities are located in Los Angeles, California, and
    Chilocco, Oklahoma. This ongoing evaluation is aimed at both monitoring some of the factors involved in delivery of the Narconon program and at assessing the long term results of this comprehensive
    socio-educational approach.
    The purpose of this evaluation was three-fold: The first goal of this evaluation was to monitor ongoing delivery to the clients at both Narconon facilities. Daily and weekly reports provided information on each client on the program.

    19. Criminal Code Of Yugoslavia
    Legal Resources. THE criminal CODE. OF THE SOCIALIST FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF YUGOSLAVIA 2 criminal CONDUCT AND criminal LIABILITY rehabilitation, EXTINCTION OF PUNISHMENT AND education, rehabilitation and proper development of juveniles who have committed criminal
    http://pbosnia.kentlaw.edu/resources/legal/bosnia/criminalcode_fry.htm
    Home
    Legal Resources
    THE CRIMINAL CODE
    OF THE SOCIALIST FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF YUGOSLAVIA
    adopted by the SFRJ Assembly at the session of the Federal Council held on September 28, 1976; declared by a decree of the President of the Republic on September 28, 1976; published in the Official Gazette SFRJ No. 44 of October 8, 1976; a correction was made in the Official Gazette SFRJ No. 36 of July 15, 1977; took effect on July 1, 1977.
    256 KB 11-13-96 Best Translation per Cubbon
    THE GENERAL PART
    Chapter 1 - INTRODUCTORY PROVISIONS
    Chapter 2
    - CRIMINAL CONDUCT AND CRIMINAL LIABILITY
    Chapter 3
    - PUNISHMENTS
    Chapter 4
    - SUSPENDED SENTENCE AND JUDICIAL ADMONITION
    Chapter 5
    - SECURITY MEASURES
    Chapter 6
    - GENERAL RULES RELATING TO EDUCATIONAL MEASURES AND TO THE PUNISHMENT OF JUVENILES
    Chapter 7
    - APPROPRIATION OF MATERIAL GAIN ACQUIRED BY THE COMMISSION OF A CRIMINAL ACT
    Chapter 8
    - LEGAL CONSEQUENCES INCIDENT TO CONVICTION Chapter 9 - REHABILITATION, EXTINCTION OF PUNISHMENT AND CONDITIONS FOR RELEASING INFORMATION FROM THE CRIMINAL RECORDS

    20. The Way To Happiness - Police Programs
    had a successful background in education, public and The Way to Happiness in its criminal rehabilitation Programs. graduates at the Occoquan Facility were so
    http://twth.org/school_police-police-pgms.html

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