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Date: November 25, 2024 Mon

Time: 9:07 pm

Results for rehabilitation, juvenile offenders

8 results found

Author: Great Britain. Office for Standards in Education, Children's Services and Skills (Ofsted)

Title: Transition Through Detention and Custody: Arrangements for Learning and Skills for Young People in Custodial or Secure Settings

Summary: This report evaluates the range and effectiveness of the arrangements for education and training for several categories of young people in the UK: those identified for their likelihood of offending; young offenders who move into custodial establishments then are transferred between different establishments while in custody; and those who move between custody and the community. The report illustrates good practice and makes recommendations for improvement.

Details: Manchester, UK: Ofsted, 2010. 34p.

Source: Internet Resource

Year: 2010

Country: United Kingdom

URL:

Shelf Number: 118621

Keywords:
Education, Juvenile Offenders
Juvenile Inmates
Juvenile Offenders (U.K.)
Rehabilitation, Juvenile Offenders
Vocational Training, Juvenile Offenders

Author: Burke, Cynthia

Title: Breaking Cycles Evaluation: A Comprehensive Approach to Youthful Offenders

Summary: The prevention component targets youths who are not yet involved in the juvenile justice system but who exhibit problem behavior such as disobeying their parents, violating curfew, repeated truancy, running away from home, or experimenting with drugs or alcohol. Youths can also self-refer if they experience parental neglect or abuse or they have other problems at home. Community Assessment Teams (CATs)—consisting of a coordinator, case managers, probation officers, and other experts—assess the needs of the youth and his or her family and then provide direct services or referrals to resources in the community to reduce the high-risk behaviors. CATs speak many different languages to communicate directly with their clients. Whenever possible, services are brought directly to the client and family. This final report describes the program and evaluation efforts that took place in San Diego County.

Details: San Diego: SANDAG (San Diego Association of Governments), 2001. 208p.

Source: Internet Resource

Year: 2001

Country: United States

URL:

Shelf Number: 119411

Keywords:
Delinquency Prevention
Family Interventions
Juvenile Offenders (San Diego)
Rehabilitation, Juvenile Offenders

Author: Butts, Jeffrey A.

Title: Process Evaluation of the City of Chicago's Juvenile Intervention and Support Center

Summary: This report presents a process evaluation of Chicago's Juvenile Intervention and Support Center which operates in several South Side neighborhoods. The program in modelled after the juvenile assessment model in several jurisdictions across the country. The assessment model includes; 1) early intervention; 2) interagency service coordination; 3) graduated sanctioning; 4) community justice and problem-solving justice; 5) restorative justice, and 6) positive youth development. This report presents the findings of the evaluation, with a focus on the following issues: program funding, design and target population, agency partnerships, governance and staffing, and data systems and policies governing the sharing of client information.

Details: Chicago: Chapin Hall at the University of Chicago, 2009. 62p.

Source: Internet Resource; Accessed August 10, 2010 at http://

Year: 2009

Country: United States

URL:

Shelf Number: 114603

Keywords:
Juvenile Assessment Centers
Juvenile Justice (Chicago)
Juvenile Offenders (Chicago)
Rehabilitation, Juvenile Offenders

Author: Warren, Julie

Title: Te Hurihanga Pilot: Evaluation Report

Summary: Te Hurihanga (The Turning Point) is a Ministry of Justice response to the problem of youth offending in New Zealand. It is a three-year pilot that reflects concerns about trends in youth offending and lack of suitable options open to the judiciary when dealing with some young offenders. The focus of this programme is to encourage young people to turn their lives around. It is a nine to eighteen month therapeutic programme for young males (aged 14 to 16 years at entry) who have appeared before the courts and who live within the Hamilton/Waikato region. The three-phased programme aims to: reduce re-offending; hold young people accountable for their offending; and provide tailored, specialist support to young people and their whaanau/families so they can make positive choices rather then continue on current (offending) pathways. This evaluation report provides the Ministry of Justice with findings from a two-year evaluation that began late June 2007 and was completed in July 2009.

Details: Wellington, NZ: New Zealand Ministry of Justice, 2009. 181p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed August 22, 2010 at: http://www.justice.govt.nz/publications/global-publications/t/te-hurihanga-pilot-evaluation-report/publications/global-publications/t/te-hurihanga-pilot-evaluation-report/documents/Te%20Hurihanga%20Pilot%20Evaluation%20Report.pdf

Year: 2009

Country: New Zealand

URL: http://www.justice.govt.nz/publications/global-publications/t/te-hurihanga-pilot-evaluation-report/publications/global-publications/t/te-hurihanga-pilot-evaluation-report/documents/Te%20Hurihanga%20Pilot%20Evaluation%20Report

Shelf Number: 118544

Keywords:
Community Based Corrections
Juvenile Offenders (New Zealand)
Rehabilitation, Juvenile Offenders
Treatment Programs, Juvenile Offenders

Author: Biehal, Nina

Title: A Report on the Intensive Fostering Pilot Programme

Summary: This intervention is targeted at serious and persistent young offenders for whom the alternative to fostering would be custody or an Intensive Supervision and Surveillance Programme. In 2005, the Youth Justice Board commissioned agencies in three parts of England to pilot the evidence-based intervention Multi-Dimensional Treatment Foster Care model which had been developed by the Oregon Social Learning Centre in the USA and which, in the context of the English youth justice system, was to be known as Intensive Fostering. We conducted an evaluation using both qualitative and quantitative data to explore the successes and challenges of IF implementation. The study examines the experiences and outcomes of the first participants in the programme in England and compares them with the outcomes of a comparison group who were sentenced to custody or an Intensive Supervision and Surveillance Programme (ISSP). This study also compares the cost of IF placements with custodial placements and assesses the cost of services used. This study draws on information provided by the IF teams and carers, and the views of young people and their parents.

Details: London: Youth Justice Board for England and Wales, 2010. 36p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed October 7, 2010 at: http://www.yjb.gov.uk/publications/Resources/Downloads/A%20Report%20on%20the%20Intensive%20Fostering%20Pilot%20Programme.pdf

Year: 2010

Country: United Kingdom

URL: http://www.yjb.gov.uk/publications/Resources/Downloads/A%20Report%20on%20the%20Intensive%20Fostering%20Pilot%20Programme.pdf

Shelf Number: 119877

Keywords:
Alternatives to Incarceration
Foster Care
Intensive Supervision
Juvenile Offenders
Rehabilitation, Juvenile Offenders

Author: Maxwell, Gabrielle

Title: Effective Programmes for Youth at Risk of Continued and Serious Offending: Something to Do, Someone to Love, Something to Hope For.

Summary: Over the last 30 years an enormous amount of research on the problem of how best to respond to youth offenders has become available. This information provides the opportunity to replace folk wisdom with evidence on best practice. The report is based on that evidence, using information from New Zealand and around the world. Yet evidence alone is not enough. Fundamental values and principles drive choices about how to respond to young people. There is not always agreement around these. In this paper we present a set of values and principles which are consistent with international human rights standards. These emphasise the rights of all children to have the opportunity to learn and grow and be treated humanely, recognising that mistakes that can damage both themselves and others are often part of growing up. The first chapter of this report sets out values and principles that build around the need and right of all children and young people to have ‘someone to love, something to do and something to hope for’. New Zealand needs to be ‘a place to call home’ in all senses of that word – a place where they can belong, a place where they are tangata whenua and have a sense of whanaungatanga, connectedness with community. The second chapter of the report summarises core findings from research that compares the backgrounds of children who do and do not offend. It indicates that factors that increase the risk of offending can be clearly identified. Understanding risks is important if we are to provide children with support early in their lives. But the research also shows that if we are to successfully intervene in the lives of young people who are already offending, then the focus needs to shift to their individual needs. We need to identify new and more appropriate ways of providing good education. We need to build life skills and help young people cope better with their emotions. We need to respond to drug and alcohol dependency. We need to respond to physical and mental health needs. We need to keep these young people safe. Above all, we need to build a web of support, community and opportunity around them so they can take advantage of the skills that can set them on the pathway to adult life. Society has a responsibility to invest in the future of all children and young people. Too often governments and the general public have taken the view that the past behaviour of these young people means that they no longer deserve opportunities that will require the investment of the State. But not investing in these young people now creates an even greater risk to community safety. It also ignores the fact that these young people have almost always been severely disadvantaged throughout their childhood and unable to benefit from opportunities available to their peers. Chapter three focuses on how best to develop and assess programmes. It examines the relationship between outcomes and investment. It describes how best to evaluate the effectiveness of programmes and it identifies the key factors that need to be the concern of those developing and operating programmes. A checklist has been included to assist those concerned to assess and evaluate the effective programme. In an appendix to the report a number of different types of programmes are described and some information is given on how their effectiveness was determined.

Details: Wellington, NZ: Henwood Trust; Institute of Policy Studies, 2010. 58p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed March 11, 2011 at: http://www.henwoodtrust.org.nz/Effective-Programmes.pdf

Year: 2010

Country: International

URL: http://www.henwoodtrust.org.nz/Effective-Programmes.pdf

Shelf Number: 120976

Keywords:
Juvenile Offenders
Rehabilitation, Juvenile Offenders
Repeat Offenders
Treatment Programs

Author: Public Health Management Corporation

Title: An Assessment of the Needs of Latino Youth Involved in the Juvenile Justice System

Summary: This report summarizes the findings from an 18-month assessment of the needs of Latino youth ages 10-20 involved with the juvenile justice system and their parents in seven Pennsylvania counties: Adams, Berks, Dauphin, Lancaster, Lehigh, Philadelphia, and York. A relatively high percentage of Latino youth in these counties are in contact with the juvenile justice system. This needs assessment was conducted by the Public Health Management Corporation (PHMC) for the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency’s Disproportionate Minority Contact Subcommittee (DMC). PHMC was assisted by the National Council on Crime and Delinquency (NCCD) in identifying model programs and best practices in juvenile justice. The goal of this needs assessment is to identify the specific needs of Latino youth in the Pennsylvania juvenile justice system in the seven counties, including:  Educational, employment, and housing needs;  Need for ESL classes;  Need for Spanish language translators and interpreters;  Need for bilingual/bicultural staff in social service organizations, juvenile justice agencies and schools;  Availability of orientation and other materials in Spanish;  Existence of culturally competent alternatives to detention; and  Special needs of immigrants, undocumented individuals, and youth who are, or who are alleged to be, gang members. This information will be used by the DMC to develop and implement strategies to address existing needs.

Details: Philadelphia, PA: Public Health Management Corporation, 2009. 80p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed August 4, 2011 at: www.portal.state.pa.us

Year: 2009

Country: United States

URL:

Shelf Number: 122309

Keywords:
Hispanic Americans
Juvenile Offenders (Pennsylvania)
Minority Youth
Rehabilitation, Juvenile Offenders
Treatment Programs

Author: Harris, Philip

Title: Investigating the Simultaneous Effects of Individual, Program and Neighborhood Attributes On Juvenile Recidivism Using GIS and Spatial Data Mining

Summary: The primary goal of this project was to develop, apply, and evaluate improved techniques to investigate the simultaneous effects of neighborhood and program forces in preventing juvenile recidivism. For many years, program evaluation researchers have presented the question, “What works to prevent delinquency for whom under what circumstances?” In community settings, answering this question presents a unique challenge, since “circumstances” includes the home neighborhoods of youths participating in correctional programs. Understanding how programs and neighborhoods jointly shape youth behavior and identifying conditions under which rehabilitative programs are successful are fundamental to planning programs that facilitate positive trajectories for physical, social, cognitive, and affective youth development. We investigated the simultaneous effects of neighborhood, program, and individual characteristics (including family) on juvenile recidivism using linear modeling, geographic information systems (GIS) and spatial data mining. GIS provides the technology to integrate diverse spatial data sets, quantify spatial relationships, and visualize the results of spatial analysis. In the context of juvenile recidivism, this approach will facilitate the investigation of how, and why, recidivism rates vary from place to place, through different programs, and among individuals. The project applies spatial data mining to the analysis of adjudicated juvenile delinquents assigned to court‐ordered programs by the Family Court of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. This population encompasses all adjudicated delinquents committed to programs by the court during the years 1996 to 2002 – more than 26,000 cases. The proposed study makes use of three levels of data: individual, program and neighborhood. In addition to data on individual youths and their families, we will employ a database of designs of the programs that they attended and two or more spatial data sets, including the crime data from Philadelphia Police Department and the U. S. Census. This study includes a vast methodological departure from current practices and can greatly improve the chances of learning more about the dynamics of juvenile recidivism, leading to more effective prevention policies and programs.

Details: Philadelphia: Temple University, Department of Criminal Justice, 2012. 254p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed January 24, 2013 at: https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/237986.pdf

Year: 2012

Country: United States

URL: https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/237986.pdf

Shelf Number: 127373

Keywords:
Crime Analysis
Delinquency Prevention
Geographic Distribution of Crime
Juvenile Recidivism
Neighborhoods and Crime
Peer Influence
Rehabilitation, Juvenile Offenders
Treatment Programs