Showing posts with label rehabilitation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rehabilitation. Show all posts

Saturday, September 19, 2015

Key Aspects of Successful Rehabilitation After Repeated or Serious Driving Offenses

In Germany, license restoration after serious or repeated offenses requires a positive Medical Psychological Assessment (MPA), a test to determine the driver's aptitude. Fulfilling the conditions necessary for a positive MPA often takes longer than the period of license revocation, which is perhaps due to the involvement of different personal, organizational, and environmental factors. To optimize the rehabilitation process, the present study analyzed the key aspects of successful rehabilitation after repeated or serious driving offenses.

After participating in the MPA, 1,631 subjects completed a questionnaire about rehabilitation efforts in order to regain their driver aptitude. The selection of items for this questionnaire was made according to our own prior research, interviews with problem drivers, and the diagnostic criteria for the MPA. Participants were asked when and from whom they obtained certain information, and how relevant this information was for their success. In contrast to other studies, which used re-offense rates as a criterion for successful rehabilitation, we used a positive MPA result (positive, negative, or training) as the criterion for success. 
  • Just over half (52%) of the participants considered themselves optimally informed about the rehabilitation process. 
  • The others (47.4% of participants) judged the adequacy of received information as less than satisfactory. 
  • Offenders who did not partake in counseling before the MPA achieved a successful result only about half as often (37.1%) as those who did (70%), 
  • and were around three times as likely to have additional courses imposed upon them (21% vs. 7.6%). 
  • Of the offenders who received crucial and helpful information at an early stage, 62.4% attained a positive MPA at the first attempt (regardless of having attended any training courses). 
The success rate for the first attempt rose to 81% for offenders who were well informed at an early stage and participated in counseling before their first MPA.

The results clearly indicate that the provision of relevant information at an early stage combined with counseling has a beneficial influence on success rates for the rehabilitation process (an increase from 37.1% to 81%). As such, we recommend the introduction of obligatory license consultations, offered by MPA experts, involving a status assessment to customize offenders' rehabilitation and thereby provide more or less intensive guidance or coaching depending on offenders' characteristics throughout their progression through the MPA system.



By: Glitsch E1Knuth D1.
  • 1a Ernst-Moritz-Arndt-University of Greifswald , Department Health and Prevention, Section: Social & Organizational Psychology , Franz-Mehring-Str. 47, D-17487 Greifswald , Germany.

Friday, September 11, 2015

Recidivism among Licensed-Released Prisoners Who Participated in the EM Program in Israel

Toward the end of 2006, a pilot program was launched in Israel wherein licensed-released prisoners were put under electronic monitoring (EM). In addition to EM, the pilot program, operated by the Prisoners' Rehabilitation Authority, provides programs of occupational supervision and personal therapy and is designed to allow for early release of those prisoners who, without increased supervision, would have been found unsuitable for early release. 

The aim of this study was to ascertain whether participation in the EM program among licensed-released prisoners in Israel might bring about lessened recidivism. For that matter, rates of arrests and incarceration were examined during a follow-up period of up to 4 years, among the entirety of licensed-released prisoners participating in the EM program between the years 2007 and 2009 (n = 155). 

To compare recidivism rates, a control group was assembled from among the entirety of released prisoners who were found unsuitable for early release in judicial conditions, and had therefore served the full term of their incarceration, to be released between the years 2005 and 2006 (a period of time during which an EM program was not yet operated among licensed-released prisoners in Israel). 

Study findings clearly show that while among the control group, 42% of released prisoners were re-incarcerated, at the end of a 4-year follow-up period, only 15% among the study group had returned to prison. 

These findings can be explained by combining the Social Control theory and the Self-Control theory which consider the period of time under EM program and the occupational and familial integration tools for reducing criminal connections and enhancing pro-social behavior.

Via: http://ht.ly/S78hx

By: Shoham E1Yehosha-Stern S2Efodi R3.
  • 1Ashkelon Academic College, Israel 
  • 2Ashkelon Academic College, Israel.
  • 3Prisoners Rehabilitation Authority, Jerusalem, Israel.

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Most Americans support rehabilitation compared to ‘tough on crime’ policies

Below:  Where Americans Prefer Criminal Justice Resources Allocated


Below:  Percentage of Americans Who Prefer Rehabilitative to Punitive Policies



Below:  Effect of Significant Factors on Preference for Rehabilitative versus Punitive Policies



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