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The corrections field, and community corrections in particular, has
long experienced tensions between its two main missions, protecting
public safety and rehabilitating offenders. Treatment-oriented
strategies that had as their goal the reintegration of offenders
into society have contended with deterrence-oriented strategies
based on apparent findings that "nothing works" in treating
offenders. In recent years, the development and application of
evidence-based practices (EBP)-practices informed by the results of
scientific research and shown to increase public safety and reduce
recidivism-have had a profound and positive impact on the
corrections field. More thorough scientific analysis of both
treatment- and deterrence-oriented programs has shown that many
programs that emphasized motivation and behavior change over
punishment have been successful in reducing crime rates among
offenders. The National Institute of Corrections (NIC), through its
sponsorship of studies and its training programs, has been a leader
in the movement toward EBP in the corrections field and an advocate
of more rigorous scientific analysis of programs for offenders. One
promising evidence-based practice for motivating offenders and
fostering positive behavioral changes is motivational interviewing
(MI). MI, which was first developed in the addiction treatment
field, is now being applied widely and with positive results in
corrections, particularly in probation and parole. The principle
behind MI is that by listening to offenders and following up on the
positive aspects of their speech and thinking, corrections
professionals can help increase offenders' motivation to make
positive changes in their lives that will reduce their likelihood
of reoffending. This publication, Motivating Offenders To Change: A
Guide for Probation and Parole, provides probation and parole
officers and other correctional professionals with both a solid
grounding in the principles behind MI and a practical guide for
applying these principles in their everyday dealings with
offenders. Through numerous examples of questions, sample
dialogues, and exercises, it presents techniques for interacting
with offenders at all stages of supervision and at varying levels
of commitment to positive change. In addition, it recognizes that
deception, resistance to change, and relapse into criminal
behaviors are realities for many offenders, and sets forth
strategies for dealing with those issues that avoid unproductive
confrontation with the offender.
How does the church address its differences? How can the struggle
draw us together rather than drive us apart? This book tells of a
gathering that asked these questions amid stories reporting on each
participant's journey with Scripture. The book also describes a
model for such engagement. Telling their stories are over twenty
church leaders, including pastors, administrators, and teachers.
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