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This rigorous survey offers a comprehensive rethinking of the
assessment and treatment of sexual offenders for a bold challenge
to practitioners. It critiques what we understand about offenders
and the mechanisms of offending behaviors, and examines how this
knowledge can best be used to reduce offending and relapses. To
this end, experts weigh the efficacy of common assessment methods
and interventions, the value of prevention programs, and the
validity of the DSM's classifications of paraphilias. This
strengths/weaknesses approach gives professional readers a guide to
the current state as well as the future of research, practice, and
policy affecting this complex and controversial field. Included in
the coverage: Strengths of actuarial risk assessment. Risk
formulation: the new frontier in risk assessment and management.
Dynamic risk factors and offender rehabilitation: a comparison of
the Good Lives Model and the Risk-Need-Responsivity Model. The best
intentions: flaws in sexually violent predator laws. Desistance
from crime: toward an integrated conceptualization for
intervention. From a victim/offender duality to a public health
perspective. A call to clear thought and accurate action, Treatment
of Sex Offenders will generate discussion and interest among
forensic psychologists, psychiatrists, clinical psychologists, and
social workers.
This book surveys the history, current status, and critical issues
regarding the various mechanisms designed to control sex offenders.
It shows that the social problem of sex offending is not apparently
resolvable by any of the means currently employed. A large array of
procedures are used in the attempt to control the difficult
population of sex offenders, including: imprisonment, institutional
and community treatment, community monitoring by probation and
parole, electronic monitoring, registration as a sex offender,
community notification of an offender's status, strict limits on
behavioral movement in the community, and residence restrictions.
However, these constraints on behavior are almost completely the
result of public outrage regarding sensational sex crimes,
overreaction of media coverage that produce inaccurate statements
of potential community risk, and the efforts of the legal
profession and politicians to quell this anger and foreboding by
enacting legislation that supposedly confronts the risk. This book
demonstrates that we have constructed a massive edifice of
community control that is socially and politically driven and which
has largely failed to contain sex crime.
"This book is a rich source of information on the application of relapse prevention with sex offenders. It presents readers promising directions for change and areas that need revision based on new research findings and the integration of emerging theoretical models that show considerable promise in this field. . . . The material in this book should help us construct a better, safer vehicle for the treatment of sex offenders in the new millennium." ?from the Foreword by G. Alan Marlatt, University of Washington It is estimated that relapse prevention methods are employed in more than 90% of all North American sex offender treatment programs (of which there are more than 2,000). Comparable statistics are true in most industrialized countries around the world. Over the last decade a great deal has been learned about the treatment of sexual offenders, and particularly about relapse prevention. This sourcebook provides clinicians with the most current, practical information about working with sex offenders to prevent relapse. It reflects the advances and insights of the past decade since the publication of Relapse Prevention with Sex Offenders, focusing on the major reconceptualizations, revisions, and innovations that will chart treatment programs for the first decade of the new millennium.
Why do men rape women? What causes an adult to sexually molest a child? Understanding why sexual deviance occurs, how it develops, and how it changes over time is essential in preventing sexual predation and designing intervention programs for relapse prevention. Sexual Deviance: Issues and Controversies addresses the biological, developmental, cultural, and learning factors in the genesis of sexual deviancy and links those theories to interventions with sex offenders. Edited by renowned sexual behavior experts Tony Ward, D. Richard Laws, and Stephen M. Hudson, this exceptional volume is divided into two sections. The first section covers explanations for sexual deviance, including ethical issues and classification systems for sexually deviant disorders. The second section addresses responses to sexual deviance, including traditional and modern intervention approaches. An eminent group of scholars, researchers, and clinicians examine - The "whys" behind sexual deviance
- Controversies surrounding offender rehabilitation
- The relationship between theory and practice
- All paraphilias including molestation and sexual assault
- Cutting edge developments in etiology, rehabilitation, and practice
Sexual Deviance: Issues and Controversies provides a comprehensive view of the psychological, biological, cultural, and situational factors that predispose sex offenders. Some of the world?s leading authorities in the area of understanding and treating sex offenders discuss, debate, and review the ideas and values underpinning research and treatment of sexual deviance. Tailored for advanced undergraduate and graduate students in courses on abnormal psychology, psychopathology, forensic psychology, and criminology, Sexual Deviance: Issues and Controversies is also essential reading for psychologists, criminal justice professionals, and policy makers.
Interdisciplinary studies on medieval mystics and their cultural
background. Contemplative life in the middle ages has been the
focus of much recent critical attention. The Symposium papers
collected in this volume illuminate the mystical tradition through
examination of written texts and material culturein the medieval
period. A particular focus is on Celtic modes of witnessing to
comtemplative vision from Ireland and Wales: an eighth-century
account of voyages to wonders beyond the known world of Irish
monasticism, and the workof Christian bards in medieval Wales.
Distinctions within the mystical tradition in England are also
explored both within differing Religious Orders and bewtween
individuals engaged with the contemplative life. Dr MARION GLASSCOE
teaches in the School of English and American Studies at the
University of Exeter. Contributors: THOMAS O'LOUGHLIN, OLIVER
DAVIES, R. IESTYN DANIEL, RUTH SMITH, VALERIE EDDEN, DENISE N.
BAKER, DENIS RENEVEY, E.A. JONES, RICHARD LAWES, NAOE KUKITA
YOSHIKAWA, C. ANNETTE GRISE, JAMES HOGG
Compact Heat Exchangers: Selection, Design, and Operation, Second
Edition, is fully revised to present the most recent and
fundamental ideas and industrial concepts in compact heat exchanger
technology. This complete reference compiles all aspects of theory,
design rules, operational issues, and the most recent developments
and technological advancements in compact heat exchangers. New to
this edition is the inclusion of micro, sintered, and porous
passage description and data, electronic cooling, and an
introduction to convective heat transfer fundamentals. New revised
content provides up-to-date coverage of industrially available
exchangers, recent fouling theories, and reactor types, with
summaries of off-design performance and system effects and
installations issues in, for example, automobiles and aircraft.
Hesselgreaves covers previously neglected approaches, such as the
Second Law (of Thermodynamics), pioneered by Bejan and co-workers.
The justification for this is that there is increasing interest in
life-cycle and sustainable approaches to industrial activity as a
whole, often involving exergy (Second Law) analysis. Heat
exchangers, being fundamental components of energy and process
systems, are both savers and spenders of energy, according to
interpretation.
The impact of man on the biosphere is profound. Quite apart from
our capacity to destroy natural ecosystems and to drive species to
extinction, we mould the evolution of the survivors by the
selection pressures we apply to them. This has implications for the
continued health of our natural biological resources and for the
way in which we seek to optimise yield from those resources. Of
these biological resources, fish stocks are particularly important
to mankind as a source of protein. On a global basis, fish stocks
provide the major source of protein for human consumption from
natural ecosystems, amounting to some seventy million tonnes in
1970. Although fisheries management has been extensively developed
over the last century, it has not hitherto considered the
evolutionary consequences of fishing activity. While this omission
may not have been serious in the past, the ever increasing
intensity of exploitation and the deteriorating health of fish
stocks has generated an urgent need for a better understanding of
evolution driven by harvesting and the implications of this for
fish stock management. The foundations for this understanding for
the most part come from recent developments in evolutionary biology
and are not generally available to fisheries scientists. The
purpose of this book is to provide this basis in a form that is
both accessible and relevant to fisheries biology.
Most forensic psychologists, psychiatrists and social workers
involved in the assessment of sex offenders today have a good grasp
of where the field stands. Many of their colleagues do not have an
appreciation of why we are where we are. This book is an attempt to
bridge that gap, to provide some historical background of sex
offender assessment from 1830 to the present. Topics covered in
this book include early efforts to identify and describe criminal
populations statistically; the introduction of phrenology as a
description of brain function; the efforts of criminal
anthropologists to develop criminal taxonomies; the technology of
anthropometry to identify individuals by measurement of bodily
structure; and the introduction of fingerprinting which replaced
anthropometry and remains largely unchanged to the present day. The
guiding principle of the book is to help the reader understand that
all of this represents a continuous thread of development and,
disparate as they might seem, all of them are connected. This book
is essential reading for undergraduates in psychology and
sociology, as well as professionals in training and early stages of
practice.
This rigorous survey offers a comprehensive rethinking of the
assessment and treatment of sexual offenders for a bold challenge
to practitioners. It critiques what we understand about offenders
and the mechanisms of offending behaviors, and examines how this
knowledge can best be used to reduce offending and relapses. To
this end, experts weigh the efficacy of common assessment methods
and interventions, the value of prevention programs, and the
validity of the DSM's classifications of paraphilias. This
strengths/weaknesses approach gives professional readers a guide to
the current state as well as the future of research, practice, and
policy affecting this complex and controversial field. Included in
the coverage: Strengths of actuarial risk assessment. Risk
formulation: the new frontier in risk assessment and management.
Dynamic risk factors and offender rehabilitation: a comparison of
the Good Lives Model and the Risk-Need-Responsivity Model. The best
intentions: flaws in sexually violent predator laws. Desistance
from crime: toward an integrated conceptualization for
intervention. From a victim/offender duality to a public health
perspective. A call to clear thought and accurate action, Treatment
of Sex Offenders will generate discussion and interest among
forensic psychologists, psychiatrists, clinical psychologists, and
social workers.
The field of theoretical ecology has expanded dramatically in the
last few years. This volume gives detailed coverage of the main
developing areas in spatial ecological theory, and is written by
world experts in the field. Integrating the perspective from field
ecology with novel methods for simplifying spatial complexity, it
offers a didactical treatment with a gradual increase in
mathematical sophistication from beginning to end. In addition, the
volume features introductions to those fundamental phenomena in
spatial ecology where emerging spatial patterns influence
ecological outcomes quantitatively. An appreciation of the
consequences of this is required if ecological theory is to move on
in the 21st century. Written for reseachers and graduate students
in theoretical, evolutionary and spatial ecology, applied
mathematics and spatial statistics, it will be seen as a ground
breaking treatment of modern spatial ecological theory.
The field of theoretical ecology has expanded dramatically in the past few years, while some of the most interesting work has been done using spatial models with stochasticity. This timely volume brings together the work of leading researchers working with this model and explores its role in the study of ecosystem dynamics. With its mathematically rigorous treatments, applications to real ecological problems, and proposals for extending the use of such modeling techniques in the future, this resource will be of great interest to all researchers in theoretical ecology, mathematical biology, and ecosystems analysis.
This advanced textbook is the first to explore the consequences of
plant dispersal for population and community dynamics, spatial
patterns, and evolution. It successfully integrates a rapidly
expanding body of theoretical and empirical research. The first
comprehensive treatment of plant dispersal set within a population
framework Examines both the processes and consequence of dispersal
Spans the entire range of research, from natural history and
collection of empirical data to modeling and evolutionary theory
Provides a clear and simple explanation of mathematical concepts
Dispersal in Plants is aimed principally at graduates interested in
plant ecology, although given the strong current interests in
invasive species and global change it will also be of interest and
use to a broad audience of plant scientists and ecologists seeking
an authoritative overview of this rapidly expanding field.
This book offers a fresh perspective on treating a population that
is often demonized by policymakers, the public, and even
clinicians. The authors argue that most sex offenders are people
like us, with the potential to lead meaningful, law-abiding
lives-if given a chance and appropriate support. They describe an
empirically and theoretically grounded rehabilitation approach, the
Good Lives Model, which can be integrated with the assessment and
intervention approaches that clinicians already use. Drawing on the
latest knowledge about factors promoting desistance from crime, the
book discusses how encouraging naturally occurring desistance
processes, and directly addressing barriers to community
reintegration, can make treatment more effective and long lasting.
Now in a fully revised and updated second edition, this important
work provides authoritative scientific and applied perspectives on
the full range of paraphilias and other sexual behavior problems.
For each major clinical syndrome, a chapter on psychopathology and
theory is followed by a chapter on assessment and treatment.
Challenges in working with sex offenders are considered in depth.
Thoroughly rewritten to reflect a decade of advances in the field,
the second edition features many new chapters and new authors. New
topics include an integrated etiological model, sexual deviance
across the lifespan, Internet offenders, multiple paraphilias,
neurobiological processes, the clinician as expert witness, and
public health approaches.
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