Letteratura scientifica selezionata sul tema "Criminal justice interventions"

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Articoli di riviste sul tema "Criminal justice interventions"

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Dobash, R. Emerson, e Russell P. Dobash. "Evaluating Criminal Justice Interventions for Domestic Violence". Crime & Delinquency 46, n. 2 (aprile 2000): 252–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0011128700046002007.

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In this article, the authors consider various approaches to the evaluation of criminal justice interventions in the area of domestic violence. Evaluations have been conducted on a range of interventions, but this article focuses particularly on evaluations of arrest and programs for violent abusers. The authors contrast randomized designs used in the primarily North American studies of arrest with the extant evaluations of abuser programs and argue for the use of more theoretically informed contextual evaluations of criminal justice interventions. Using their own 3-year evaluation study of two Scottish abuser programs, the authors demonstrate how the contextual approach is attuned to both outcome and process and results in more empirically informed assessments of how change is achieved in the behavior and orientations of violent men. The authors argue that evaluations of criminal justice-based interventions should be designed to fit the phenomena under consideration as well as the intervention itself.
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Newbury-Birch, Dorothy, Ruth McGovern, Jennifer Birch, Gillian O'Neill, Hannah Kaner, Arun Sondhi e Kieran Lynch. "A rapid systematic review of what we know about alcohol use disorders and brief interventions in the criminal justice system". International Journal of Prisoner Health 12, n. 1 (14 marzo 2016): 57–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijph-08-2015-0024.

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to review the evidence of alcohol use disorders within the different stages of the criminal justice system in the UK. Furthermore it reviewed the worldwide evidence of alcohol brief interventions in the various stages of the criminal justice system. Design/methodology/approach – A rapid systematic review of publications was conducted from the year 2000 to 2014 regarding the prevalence of alcohol use disorders in the various stages of the criminal justice system. The second part of the work was a rapid review of effectiveness studies of interventions for alcohol brief interventions. Studies were included if they had a comparison group. Worldwide evidence was included that consisted of up to three hours of face-to-face brief intervention either in one session or numerous sessions. Findings – This review found that 64-88 per cent of adults in the police custody setting; 95 per cent in the magistrate court setting; 53-69 per cent in the probation setting and 5,913-863 per cent in the prison system and 64 per cent of young people in the criminal justice system in the UK scored positive for an alcohol use disorder. There is very little evidence of effectiveness of brief interventions in the various stages of the criminal justice system mainly due to the lack of follow-up data. Social implications – Brief alcohol interventions have a large and robust evidence base for reducing alcohol use in risky drinkers, particularly in primary care settings. However, there is little evidence of effect upon drinking levels in criminal justice settings. Whilst the approach shows promise with some effects being shown on alcohol-related harm as well as with young people in the USA, more robust research is needed to ascertain effectiveness of alcohol brief interventions in this setting. Originality/value – This paper provides evidence of alcohol use disorders in the different stages of the criminal justice system in the UK using a validated tool as well as reviewing the worldwide evidence for short ( < three hours) alcohol brief intervention in this setting.
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Hough, Mike. "Balancing public health and criminal justice interventions". International Journal of Drug Policy 12, n. 5-6 (novembre 2001): 429–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0955-3959(01)00105-0.

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Goodwin, Sarah. "Arts groups as community-based criminal justice interventions". Criminal Justice Matters 93, n. 1 (settembre 2013): 30–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09627251.2013.833796.

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Blatch, Chris, Andrew Webber, Kevin O’Sullivan e Gerard van Doorn. "Cost-benefits of a domestic abuse program for Australian offenders". Journal of Criminological Research, Policy and Practice 3, n. 1 (13 marzo 2017): 61–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jcrpp-10-2016-0026.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to determine recidivism costs and benefits for 1,030 community-based male offenders enrolled in a domestic abuse program (DAP) compared to an untreated control group (n=1,030) matched on risk factors. Design/methodology/approach The study time frame was October 1, 2007-June 30, 2010 with reconvictions measured to December 31, 2010. Follow up averaged 19 months. Controls received standard community supervision, but no domestic violence group interventions. Follow up measures included court costs for violent and non-violent reconvictions; re-incarcerations and community-based orders costs measured in days. Findings Adjusting for time at risk, DAP enrollees had 29 percent fewer reconvictions, 46 percent fewer violent reconvictions, 34 percent fewer custodial days, but 23 percent more days on community orders. Costs: DAP enrollment avoided $2.52 M in custodial costs, but higher community correction costs (+$773 K) and court costs (+$5.8 K), reducing the DAP’s criminal justice system cost savings to $1.754 M ($8.92 M for the DAP group compared to $10.67M for controls). Cost benefits: when the 64 DAP program costs were deducted ($602 K), the net benefit to the New South Wales criminal justice system was $1,141 M, or $1,108 per enrollee, providing a net benefit/cost ratio of 2.89. If the DAP was completed, the net benefit was $1,820 per offender. These results compares favorably to economic evaluations of other community-based interventions. Practical implications Group interventions for domestically violent (DV) offenders can provide good investment returns to tax payers and government by reducing demand on scarce criminal justice system resources. The study provides insights into justice costs for DV offenders; a methodological template to determine cost benefits for offender programs and a contribution to cost-effective evidence-based crime reduction interventions. Originality/value Using a rigorous methodology, official court, custodial and community correction services costing data, this is the first Australian cost benefit analysis of a domestic violence group intervention, and the first to justify program expenditure by demonstrating substantial savings to the criminal justice system.
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Malloch, Margaret, Gill McIvor e Cheryl Burgess. "‘Holistic’ Community Punishment and Criminal Justice Interventions for Women". Howard Journal of Criminal Justice 53, n. 4 (20 maggio 2014): 395–410. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hojo.12077.

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Andrews, D. A. "The impact of nonprogrammatic factors on criminal-justice interventions". Legal and Criminological Psychology 16, n. 1 (17 gennaio 2011): 1–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1348/135532510x521485.

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PETERSON, RICHARD R. "REDUCING INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE: MOVING BEYOND CRIMINAL JUSTICE INTERVENTIONS". Criminology & Public Policy 7, n. 4 (novembre 2008): 537–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-9133.2008.00526.x.

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Aliverti, Ana, e Rachel Seoighe. "Lost in Translation? Examining the Role of Court Interpreters in Cases Involving Foreign National Defendants in England and Wales". New Criminal Law Review 20, n. 1 (2017): 130–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/nclr.2017.20.1.130.

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Court interpreters have seldom been featured in studies on the criminal courts. Until recently, cases requiring court interpreters were rare and marginal. The peculiarity and historical rarity of these cases may explain the lack of academic consideration of the work of court interpreters in the criminal justice literature. Rapid demographic changes brought about by mass migration, however, are changing the make-up of criminal justice proceedings, rendering court interpreters key participants and inexorable aides for the everyday running of the criminal justice system. This article examines the increased reliance on interpreters and the nature of their involvement in criminal justice proceedings. It will explore the relationship between interpreters and defendants, on the one hand, and between interpreters, counsels, and judges, on the other. Drawing on empirical data stemming from a research project on foreign national defendants conducted in Birmingham’s criminal courts, we explore issues of trust and reliability underpinning the intervention of court interpreters and the implications of these interventions for the defendant’s case. The use of interpreters aims first and foremost to ensure the defendant’s right to defense. Yet, as we show, their intervention is often propelled or hindered by instrumental, procedural, or logistical reasons, intimately linked to the rapid transformation of the demography of defendants and the privatization of services related to the criminal justice system.
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Antal, Imola, Júlia Szigeti e Maria Stoleru. "Women Victims of Domestic Violence: Analysis of Their Perceptions of the Criminal Justice System in Romania". Social Change Review 9, n. 1 (1 giugno 2011): 17–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/scr-2016-0015.

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Abstract Criminal justice interventions are important to reduce domestic violence and protect women. In this study we will tackle the unwillingness of women in two regions of Romania to press charges and the failure of the criminal justice system in providing them protection and justice. “Why don’t women press charges?” was the main question that stood at the basis of the international research WOSAFEJUS1, where Babeş-Bolyai University (UBB) was the main Romanian partner through its Faculty of Sociology and Social Work. In our paper we will analyse the studies relevant to the field of domestic violence and we will pay a special attention to those that take into consideration the functioning of the criminal justice system. We will present a preliminary analysis of the women’s perception of the criminal justice system in Romania. Our results are based on 76 semi-structured interviews with women in a situation of domestic violence. Atlas.ti was used to aid a thematic analysis of the qualitative data. The results will highlight women’s expectations regarding the justice system, the perceived usefulness of the legal intervention as well as the main factors that come into play when they decide to stay or to leave the criminal justice process. Even though in most of the cases police intervention can’t or doesn’t provide safety and the rapid elimination of danger, the importance of non-legislative factors of intervention has nevertheless been emphasized.
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Tesi sul tema "Criminal justice interventions"

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Pycroft, Aaron. "Addiction and criminal justice interventions : a complex systems analysis". Thesis, University of Portsmouth, 2014. https://researchportal.port.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/addiction-and-criminal-justice-interventions(87a09af6-0c9e-4f37-9e62-1da5e1bcf1d4).html.

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The candidate’s interest in the field of addiction and criminal justice interventions stems from his experience as a practitioner and senior manager in substance misuse services over a 15 year period from 1989 until 2003. During this time he was involved in providing, managing and developing services for people with enduring and complex needs, of which involvement with the criminal justice system was a key feature. The candidate during this period was also involved in training professionals to work with addition and multiple complex needs, was an accredited practice teacher for social work and probation students, and involved in higher education teaching for the Schools of Social Work and the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Southampton. On having taken up a full time academic career in 2003 the publications which form the body of this submission both outline and analyse the candidates scholarship and research in conceptualising, research and teaching the evidence, ethics and outcomes of interventions to address addition within a context of complex and multiple needs. Central to this work has been the development of an applied social science perspective concerning the relevance and complexity theory to understanding addition as a complex adaptive system and the necessity of the whole systems approaches to providing a framework for policy formation, the management of service delivery and the practice of interventions. It will be argued that in the delivery of interventions to address addition, complexity theory challenges our ontological, epistemological and methodological assumptions of casual and linear relationships in the delivery, practice and outcomes from those interventions. It will also be argued that application of complexity theory represents a new heuristics for overcoming what we have been hitherto unabridged fault lines in social science methodologies.
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Taylor, Holly. "Evaluating criminal justice interventions in the field of domestic violence : a realist approach". Thesis, University of Birmingham, 2014. http://etheses.bham.ac.uk//id/eprint/5240/.

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This thesis evaluates the combination of two criminal justice interventions in the field of the domestic violence. The intervention, termed a Domestic Violence Court Advisory Service (DVCAS) throughout the thesis, comprises two elements –Independent Domestic Violence Advisers (IDVAs) and Specialist Domestic Violence Courts (SDVCs). Both initiatives were instituted in the wake of much criticism of the treatment of domestic violence in the Criminal Justice System (CJS). To date, however, there has been no rigorous evaluation of the combined efficacy of these initiatives – in particular, regarding their impact on the number of offenders brought to justice. This thesis examines how a DVCAS can increase the successful prosecution of domestic violence offences through increased victim participation, better court outcomes and a wide and varied use of sentencing options. The thesis highlights ‘what works and why’ in prosecuting domestic violence offences, and in so doing identifies a number of outcomes to suggest that certain practices in the police and CPS do not always support the DVCAS in achieving its aims, in particular, through ineffective investigations, inappropriate safeguarding responses and poor prosecution practices.
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Dube, Paul. "The new security beat : an audit of interventions employed to protect young people at Westbank High School in Metro-South district of the Western Cape". Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/10353.

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Includes bibliographical references.
All over the world, state police are but one actor within a hybrid policing field involved in the provision of security. Civil society can legitimately come together in either self-help schemes or by means of buying security to deal with feelings of insecurity. An area can therefore be subject to plural policing. This paper is an audit of security interventions implemented to protect learners enrolled at Westbank High School. Westbank High School is a high-risk school. Learners in schools suffer a double-blow because not only do they suffer from crime within the school walls but also outside the school walls. Two general questions emerge in this situation. The first being, what is being done by state and non-state actors about the problem of crime in and around schools? Secondly, how are school children being supported and protected against criminal activity in their respective schools?
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Butler, Colleen. "Intercultural conflict styles in the criminal justice system and the implications for intercultural interventions". Scholarly Commons, 2010. https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/uop_etds/756.

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This thesis explored the communication and conflict style contrasts between criminal justice professionals and African American defendants that can interfere with the equitable administration of justice in the criminal justice system in Dane County, Wisconsin. The focus of this research was on the potential conflict style contrasts between criminal justice professionals and African Americans because the racial disparity in the incarceration rate was greatest for African Americans. This research project began from the premise that the racial incarceration rate disparity was caused in part by differences in cultural conflict and communication styles, and it explored the intersection of power differentials and cultural conflict and communication style differentials. The study employed the Intercultural Conflict Style Inventory, courtroom observations, and two focus groups. One focus group was composed of professionals in the criminal justice system from Dane County, Wisconsin, and the other of African Americans who have been impacted negatively by this system. All findings were used to develop specific training recommendations to help criminal justice professionals to understand conflict and communication style preferences with the intention of decreasing the disparate treatment of members of the African American community. The combined research strategies suggested that the primary culture of the criminal justice system was consistent with European American cultural preferences for low-context, direct, and emotionally restrained communication and conflict styles, which contrasts with the general preference of the African American culture for a more emotionally expressive engagement style. While this research did not specifically indicate that intercultural miscommunication directly impacts the equitable distribution of justice in Dane County, it did suggest that cultural contrasts may be one variable contributing to the inequitable distribution of justice.
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Vijay, Sianne Diana. "The Impact of Criminal Justice Interventions and Social Policies on Family Violence: Theory and Evidence". Scholar Commons, 2016. http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/6599.

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In 2014, the Child Protective Services received 3.6 million referrals alleging child abuse and neglect, of which, 702,000 children were victims of abuse and neglect and an estimated 1,580 children died due to maltreatment. In addition to this appalling toll, the welfare effects of child victimization are substantial. Evidence suggests that compared to demographically similar adults who were non-victims, adults with documented histories of maltreatment are more likely to engage in criminal behavior; have adverse mental and physical health problems such as depression, addiction and post-traumatic stress disorder; and have lower levels of education and earnings. These essays contribute toward the understanding of the consequences of two very distinctive policies – mandatory arrest and medical marijuana laws – and their impact on child maltreatment. An important and controversial question in criminal justice policy concerns whether aggressive sanctions, such as mandatory arrest policies, serve as effective deterrents to familial violence. Chapter 1 provides a theoretical framework that models child abuse in which I allow for a strategic interaction between the child and his or her abuser. The comparative statics yield clear predictions of the impact of sanctions on child maltreatment – as the cost and probability of external interventions rise, the probability of violence falls. I follow this theoretical analysis with an empirical investigation of the impact of mandatory arrest policies on child victimization. I find a statistically significant and positive relationship between states that have implemented mandatory arrest laws and reported child maltreatment rates. This may seem surprising; however there are two explanations for the results. The likely explanation is that reporting of maltreatment increased in states mandating arrest; alternatively, recidivism may have increased in these states. Evidence from the OLS estimates for the reporting of abuse and child fatality rates (a proxy for the true incidence of child abuse), demonstrates that the increase in maltreatment is not due to recidivism but, in fact, more people reporting abuse to the police and Child Protective Services. The most important result that emerges from the data, however, is that while reported abuse increases in states with mandatory arrest laws, the true incidence of maltreatment actually falls. The ultimate goal of this paper is to stimulate further theoretical and empirical research that focuses on child abuse and prevention, thus enhancing an understanding of how sanctions influence child victimization. The next chapter looks at one potential risk factor for child maltreatment –marijuana use and liberalization –using evidence from medical marijuana laws (MMLs). Chapter 2 begins by extending the current MML-crime literature by providing a comprehensive evaluation of the impact of MMLs implemented at the state level on reported child victimization rates. I show that specific modes of medical marijuana regulation differentially influence the magnitude of reported incidences of child abuse, a finding which sheds new light on the current literature. More specifically, using fixed effects analysis applied to data from the National Child Abuse and Neglect Database System (NCANDS) and the Uniform Crime Reports (UCR), I show that states that allow for home cultivation in addition to decriminalizing its use see a further increase in the magnitude of reported incidences of child maltreatment rates. Since completing my dissertation, I have continued to investigate into issues that have implications for both theory and practice in my field. To that extent, I plan to analyze the slowly developing public sphere –a platform where culture and social change rely on both media and conversation.
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Lugano, Geoffrey. "Politicization of international criminal interventions and the impasse of transitional justice : a comparative study of Uganda and Kenya". Thesis, University of Warwick, 2018. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/107732/.

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Since the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) establishment in 2002, its interventions in African situations have produced a mix of results. Whereas many observers have hailed the ICC’s forays onto the continent for expanding the avenues of justice for mass atrocities, there are also political connotations to some of its interventions, as evidenced in narratives of selectivity and neo-colonialism. Building on the latter impacts of the Court’s interventions in Africa, this thesis seeks to discern the shape of local/regional uptake of international criminal justice (ICJ). This follows from contrasting the ICC’s qualification as a moral agent in the global war on impunity for international crimes, with domestic political translations of the Court’s interventions and subsequent collective action at local and regional levels. Thus, the principal argument from this thesis is that contextual normative adaptions produce global-local exchanges that result in viable conditions under which the ICC’s interventions are politicized, to the detriment of its investigative activities and legacy in situation countries. More specifically, elite level exchanges in sub-national, national, regional and international realms produce blends of local and global realities, resulting into the ICC’s exposure to politicization. These findings are instructive for wider debates on the subtle ways in which the ICC is undermined (rather than outright defiance), with spiralling effects on long term peace-building and other regional contexts. In discerning the aforementioned conclusions, I asked the simple research questions: (1) why and how is an ostensibly international legal response to heinous crimes susceptible to (mis)appropriation and subversion by domestic political elites? (2) what are the far-reaching consequences of politicizing the ICC’s interventions on creating conditions for lasting peace in fragile societies? Given the duality of the ICC’s politicization – through (mis)appropriation and subversion, the thesis adopted a comparative study of Uganda and Kenya, which exemplify the two forms of domestic translations of ICJ. The thesis employed a qualitative methodological approach that drew upon secondary data sources, as well as primary data collected through personal key informant interviews in the Netherlands, Uganda and Kenya, with ICC officials, politicians, government officials, representatives of local and international organizations and affected communities. Some of the secondary data sources include: journal articles, media reports, government documents, books, online sources, legal instruments, the ICC’s documents and official speeches. The data collected was analyzed through grounded theory, in which evidence collected raised new sub-questions for further interrogation. All available evidence was then triangulated to develop a critical analysis of the research questions posed. Conceptually, I built on three interrelated concepts (the ICC’s projection of a moral universe, the narrative lens and spatial hierarchies) to discern the ICJ norm diffusion in local/regional contexts. The thesis concludes that the various forms of political resistance to the ICC have pernicious effects on peace-building beyond national boundaries. Perhaps, a greater degree of the Court’s acceptance will be driven by its proactive steps towards the universality of justice, whose absence partly informed the construction of narratives on some of its foremost interventions in Africa.
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Phillips, Bailey A. "Interventions for formerly incarcerated adult populations and their impact on recidivism: A scoping review about re-entry interventions". The Ohio State University, 2021. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1619128857497913.

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Barrett, Barbara. "Developing methods for the economic evaluation of criminal justice interventions : application to the UK dangerous and severe personality disorder programme". Thesis, King's College London (University of London), 2009. https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/developing-methods-for-the-economic-evaluation-of-criminal-justice-interventions(9f757bdf-47c0-445a-995b-566b09cde925).html.

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Martin, Lee. "An Intersectional Approach to Earlier Interventions within the Criminal Justice System in the UK : An Analysis of Two Governmental Documents". Thesis, Linköpings universitet, Tema Genus, 2019. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-157738.

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This thesis seeks to explore how two governmental documents discuss earlier preventions of criminality. The two documents analyzed are the Female Offender Strategy and The Government’s Approach to Crime Prevention. The first of these documents main aim is to provide a more gender sensitive approach to the criminal justice system within the United Kingdom and the latter document does not explicitly differ between the genders. The analysis will be carried out with the use of feminist pathways theory and through an intersectional lens, in order to demonstrate how the two documents discuss earlier prevention of criminality. By utilizing the methodology of What’s the Problem Represented to be (WPR) the aim is to demonstrate who benefits from the documents and who is relegated to the sidelines. Neither of the two documents demonstrate a strategy or policy which takes into account the many varying identities which exist amongst the inmate population of the criminal justice system.
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Briscoe, Suzanne Marie Social Science &amp Policy UNSW. "Deterrence, punishment severity and drink-driving". Awarded by:University of New South Wales. Social Science and Policy, 2005. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/23442.

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This thesis tests one of the major propositions of deterrence theory: that increases in the severity of punishment can reduce the likelihood of offending. To this end, a case study in which the statutory penalties were doubled for almost all drink-driving offences in New South Wales, Australia, is examined. Two quasi-experimental studies were undertaken to assess the impact of these legislative changes: an interrupted time-series analysis of road crash rates (Study 1) and an analysis of drink-driving reoffending rates before and after the penalty changes were implemented (Study 2). Study 1 showed a significant increase in a surrogate measure of alcohol-related road crashes after the tougher drink-driving penalties were introduced. Further analyses suggested that this increase was driven primarily by a secular rise in non alcohol-related crashes that coincided with the policy???s implementation. Two possible conclusions about the deterrent effect of the policy are drawn from these findings: (1) that there was a reduction in alcohol-related road crashes which was overwhelmed by the rise in non alcohol-related crashes occurring around the same time or (2) that there was no change in crash rates. Study 2 found that drink-drivers who were convicted under the new penalty regime were less likely, and took longer, to reoffend than drink-drivers convicted before the introduction of the new penalties. This reduction in reoffending was only apparent for drink-drivers residing in country and regional areas and was small in magnitude.These latter findings are consistent with the possibility that the penalty changes coincided with a reduction in alcohol-related crashes but suggest that any decrease is likely to have been relatively small. A third study using a scenario-based survey methodology was also undertaken to examine the relationship between legal sanctions and willingness to drink-drive, controlling for other factors. The results of this study showed that participants who were more knowledgeable about drink-driving penalties were less likely to state that they would offend in the drink-driving scenario than participants who were less knowledgeable about the law. The implications of these findings for deterrence theory and criminal justice policy are discussed.
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Libri sul tema "Criminal justice interventions"

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Drug interventions in criminal justice. Maidenhead: Open University Press, 2010.

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Service, Drugs Prevention Advisory. Drugs interventions in the criminal justice system: Guidance manual. [London]: Home Office, 1999.

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Wormer, Katherine S. Van, e Lorenn Walker. Restorative justice today: Applications of restorative interventions. Thousand Oaks, Calif: SAGE Publications, 2013.

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The heart of intimate abuse: New interventions in child welfare, criminal justice, and health settings. New York: Springer Pub. Co., 1998.

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Richards, Amanda. West Midlands Regional Health Authority drug projects and the criminal justice system: A study of the services provided for the criminal justice system and issues arising from these interventions. Birmingham: University of Central England in Birmingham, 1992.

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Hendricks, James E., e Cindy S. Hendricks. Crisis intervention in criminal justice/social service. 5a ed. Springfield , Illinois: Charles C. Thomas Publisher, Ltd., 2014.

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Romano, Anne T. Taking charge: Crisis intervention in criminal justice. New York: Greenwood Press, 1990.

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Healey, Kerry Murphy. Batterer intervention: Program approaches and criminal justice strategies. New York: Nova Science Publishers, 2009.

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1957-, Smith Christine, O'Sullivan Chris S. 1947-, National Institute of Justice (U.S.) e Abt Associates, a cura di. Batterer intervention: Program approaches and criminal justice strategies. Washington, DC: U.S. Dept. of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, National Institute of Justice, 1998.

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Healey, Kerry Murphy. Batterer intervention: Program approaches and criminal justice strategies. Washington, DC: U.S. Dept. of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, National Institute of Justice, 1998.

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Capitoli di libri sul tema "Criminal justice interventions"

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Roesch, Ronald, e Denise J. Foisy. "Examining Criminal Justice Interventions". In Redefining Social Problems, 201–16. Boston, MA: Springer US, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4899-2236-6_12.

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Marshall, Daniel, e Terry Thomas. "Police (1): Interventions". In Privacy and Criminal Justice, 39–70. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-64912-2_3.

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McGuire, James. "Interventions and Outcomes: Accumulating Evidence". In Mental Health, Crime and Criminal Justice, 48–66. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137453884_4.

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MacKenzie, Doris Layton. "Examining the Effectiveness of Correctional Interventions". In Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice, 1471–79. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-5690-2_574.

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Bennett, Sarah, Jacqueline Davis e Lorraine Mazerolle. "Police-Led Interventions to Enhance Police Legitimacy". In Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice, 3753–65. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-5690-2_478.

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Stitzer, Maxine L., e Mary E. McCaul. "Criminal Justice Interventions with Drug and Alcohol Abusers". In Behavioral Approaches to Crime and Delinquency, 331–61. Boston, MA: Springer US, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-0903-1_12.

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Feder, Lynette, e Marianne Junger. "Prenatal and Postnatal Preventive Interventions Based on Risk Factors". In Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice, 3895–905. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-5690-2_582.

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Caulfield, Laura, e Ella Simpson. "Arts-based interventions in the justice system". In The Routledge Companion to Rehabilitative Work in Criminal Justice, 396–408. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315102832-36.

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Chodrow, Brian, e Hon Peggy Fulton Hora. "DWI/DUI Interventions". In Handbook of Evidence-Based Substance Abuse Treatment in Criminal Justice Settings, 103–22. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-9470-7_7.

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Grommon, Eric, e Jason Rydberg. "Correctional Interventions and Outcomes". In The Handbook of Measurement Issues in Criminology and Criminal Justice, 351–76. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118868799.ch16.

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Atti di convegni sul tema "Criminal justice interventions"

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Mirmajidi, Sepideh. "Evaluation of the results of criminal interventions in sexual violence cases: Redefining Justice from the Perspective of Psychological Needs of Sexual Violence Victims". In 2nd World Conference on Social Sciences and Humanities. Acavent, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.33422/2nd.shconf.2020.09.235.

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Rapporti di organizzazioni sul tema "Criminal justice interventions"

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Yunus, Raudah Mohd, Pauline Oosterhoff, Charity Jensen, Nicola Pocock e Francis Somerwell. Modern Slavery Prevention and Responses in Myanmar: An Evidence Map. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), novembre 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/clarissa.2020.002.

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Abstract (sommario):
This Emerging Evidence Report describes the availability of evidence on modern slavery interventions in Myanmar presented in the programme's interactive Evidence Map. This report on Myanmar uses the same methodology and complements the evidence map on interventions to tackle trafficking, child and forced labour in South Asia for Nepal, India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh. The Evidence Map provides an outline of where evidence is concentrated and where it is missing by mapping out existing and ongoing impact evaluations and observational studies exploring different types of modern slavery interventions and outcomes for specific target populations (survivors, employers, landlords, service providers, criminal justice officials) and at different levels (individual, community, state). It also identifies key ‘gaps’ in evidence. Both the Evidence Map and this report foremost target the UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) and its partners in the CLARISSA research programme to support evidence-informed policymaking on innovations to reduce the worst forms of child labour. We hope that it is also useful to academics and practitioners working to address modern slavery, or in the intervention areas and locations described.
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