ABSTRACT

This major new book brings together leading researchers in the field in order to describe and analyse internationally significant theoretical and empirical work on offender supervision, and to address the policy and practice implications of this work within and across jurisdictions. Arising out of the work of the international Collaboration of Researchers for the Effective Development of Offender Supervision (CREDOS), this book examines questions and issues that have arisen both within effectiveness research, and from research on desistance from offending. The book draws out the lessons that can be learned not just about ‘what works?’, but about how and why particular practices support desistance in specific jurisdictional, cultural and local contexts.


Key themes addressed in this book include:

  • New directions in theory and paradigms for practice
  • Staff skills and effective offender supervision
  • Different issues and challenges in improving offender supervision
  • The role of families, ‘significant others’ and social networks
  • Understanding and supporting compliance within supervision
  • Exploring the social, political, organisational and historical contexts of offender supervision

Offender Supervision will be essential reading for academics, undergraduate and postgraduate students, policy makers, managers and practitioners interested in offender supervision.

chapter 1|15 pages

Introduction

‘What's new and exciting?’

part I|71 pages

New Directions in Theory

chapter 3|24 pages

The Good Lives Model of offender rehabilitation

Basic assumptions, aetiological commitments, and practice implications

chapter 4|23 pages

The desistance paradigm in correctional practice

From programmes to lives

part II|64 pages

Staff skills and effective offender supervision

chapter 5|22 pages

Technology transfer

The importance of ongoing clinical supervision in translating ‘what works' to everyday community supervision 1

part III|86 pages

Improving offender supervision

chapter 9|21 pages

Managing the chaos

Implementing evidence-based practices in correctional agencies

chapter 11|24 pages

Beyond supervision

Judicial involvement in offender managemen

part IV|83 pages

Significant others and social networks

chapter 12|16 pages

It's relational

Integrating family into community corrections

chapter 13|25 pages

Justice for all

Family matters in offender supervision

chapter 15|21 pages

Collaborating with the community, trained volunteers and faith traditions

Building social capacity and making meaning to support desistance

part V|84 pages

Offenders' compliance with supervision

chapter 16|19 pages

Compliance with community penalties

The importance of interactional dynamics

chapter 17|23 pages

Case management in corrections

Evidence, issues and challenges 1

part VI|141 pages

Offender supervision in its contexts

chapter 20|21 pages

The socio-political context of reforms in probation agencies

Impact on adoption of evidence-based practices 1

chapter 22|20 pages

The purposes of supervision

Practitioner and policy perpectives in england and wales

chapter 23|21 pages

Pre-sentence reports in england and wales

Changing discourses of need, risk and quality

chapter 24|17 pages

Supervision in historical context

Learning the lessons of (oral) history 1

chapter 25|25 pages

Electronic monitoring

Towards integration into offender management? 1

chapter 26|14 pages

Conclusion

Where are we now?