Reexamining Community Corrections Models
- 1 October 1991
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Crime & Delinquency
- Vol. 37 (4) , 449-464
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0011128791037004003
Abstract
Historically, community corrections has been based on models of diversion, advocacy, and reintegration. Increases in crime and more high-risk offenders being sentenced to probation have led to emphases on control and surveillance, and “just deserts,” adversary, and restitution models have replaced the original models. The author argues for strategies of internalization, reintegrative shaming, and victim-offender reconciliation for a comprehensive community corrections model promoting change in the offender, the correctional process, and the community.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of the Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines on Probation AgentsJournal of Crime and Justice, 1990
- Conditions That Permit Intensive Supervision Programs to SurviveCrime & Delinquency, 1990
- IntroductionCrime & Delinquency, 1990
- Running on Empty: Creativity and the Correctional AgendaCrime & Delinquency, 1989
- Reintegrating the Concept of Community into Community-Based CorrectionsCrime & Delinquency, 1989
- Crime, Shame and ReintegrationPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1989
- NCCD Research Review : Wider, Stronger, and Different Nets: the Dialectics of Criminal Justice ReformJournal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 1981
- What Prison Guards Think: A Profile of the Illinois ForceCrime & Delinquency, 1978
- Correctional PolicyCrime & Delinquency, 1971
- Compliance, identification, and internalization three processes of attitude changeJournal of Conflict Resolution, 1958