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This book looks deeply at women researchers' personal stories,
struggles, and successes within the context of conducting research
in the male-dominated sphere of prison studies. Their insights
provide an analytical resource from which readers can better
understand the context of doing prison research and the theoretical
and methodological challenges that come with it. Their
autoethnographic stories shed light on the unique issues faced by
women prison researchers and provide a roadmap for understanding
the novel strategies, methodological landmines, and epistemological
challenges for those who will come after them. Their experiences as
women investigators are couched in a distinct set of challenges.
This book is intended to highlight those researchers' challenges
and also, to celebrate their successes.
The question of 'what works' in offender treatment has dominated
the field of prisoner re-entry and recidivism research for the last
thirty years. One of the primary ways the criminal justice system
tries to reduce the rates of recidivism among offenders is through
the use of cognitive behavioural programs (CBP) as in-prison
intervention strategies. The emphasis for these programs is on the
idea that inmates are in prison because they made poor choices and
bad decisions. Inmates' thinking is characterized as flawed and the
purpose of the program is to teach them to think and act in
socially appropriate ways so they will be less inclined to return
to prison after their release. This book delves into the heart of
one such cognitive behavioural programme, examines its inner
workings, its effects on inmates' narrated experience and considers
what happens when a CBP of substandard quality and integrity is
used as a gateway for inmates' release. Based on original empirical
research, this book provides realistic suggestions for improving
policy, for reforming current in-prison programs engaging in
problematic practices and for instituting alternatives that take
the needs of the inmates into greater account. This book is
essential reading for students and academics engaged in the study
of sociology, criminal justice, prisons, social policy, sentencing
and punishment.
The question of 'what works' in offender treatment has dominated
the field of prisoner re-entry and recidivism research for the last
thirty years. One of the primary ways the criminal justice system
tries to reduce the rates of recidivism among offenders is through
the use of cognitive behavioural programs (CBP) as in-prison
intervention strategies. The emphasis for these programs is on the
idea that inmates are in prison because they made poor choices and
bad decisions. Inmates' thinking is characterized as flawed and the
purpose of the program is to teach them to think and act in
socially appropriate ways so they will be less inclined to return
to prison after their release. This book delves into the heart of
one such cognitive behavioural programme, examines its inner
workings, its effects on inmates' narrated experience and considers
what happens when a CBP of substandard quality and integrity is
used as a gateway for inmates' release. Based on original empirical
research, this book provides realistic suggestions for improving
policy, for reforming current in-prison programs engaging in
problematic practices and for instituting alternatives that take
the needs of the inmates into greater account. This book is
essential reading for students and academics engaged in the study
of sociology, criminal justice, prisons, social policy, sentencing
and punishment.
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