Results 171 to 180 of about 183,639 (245)
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Psychosocial Maturation, Race, and Desistance from Crime

Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2019
Research on maturation and its relation to antisocial behavior has progressed appreciably in recent years. Psychosocial maturation is a relatively recent concept of development that scholarship has linked to risky behavior. Psychosocial maturation appears to be a promising explanation of the process of exiting criminal behavior, known as desistance ...
Michael Rocque   +2 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Who is coming back to prison? Emerging adulthood and the challenges associated with desistance from crime

International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice, 2023
Emerging adulthood is a period involving dramatic change and many life transitions. Justice-involved individuals experiencing these transitions are statistically more likely to engage in criminal behaviours and to return into incarceration and are ...
Isabelle F.-Dufour   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Psychedelics and Desistance From Crime: Lessons From the Concord Prison Experiment

Journal of humanistic psychology, 2022
Recent investigations of naturalistic psychedelic use purport that psychedelic therapies may be useful in criminal justice contexts for reducing recidivism.
Logan Neitzke-Spruill
semanticscholar   +1 more source

“Disincarcerating incarcerated emotions”: The influence of emotional dynamics behind and beyond bars on desistance from crime

Criminology & Criminal Justice, 2022
This article is based on 50 interviews and six written testimonies of 24 individuals convicted, incarcerated, and then released from penitentiaries in Switzerland.
Aurélie Stoll
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Dropout from Treatment and Desistance from Crime among Released Prisoners in Jerusalem Halfway House for Prisoners with Substance Misuse Disorder

International journal of offender therapy and comparative criminology, 2021
The study aims to investigate the rates of recidivism among prisoners on parole with a substance misuse disorder who participated in the Jerusalem halfway-house, which combines supervision, employment, and a comprehensive therapeutic program.
Efrat Shoham   +3 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Desistance from Crime

2014
Most offenders, even persistent offenders, eventually desist from crime; and to a significant extent they do this on their own initiative. To the legendary visitor from Mars, these simple facts – and they are facts – might seem to offer huge hope to earth-bound criminal justice systems.
Shawn D. Bushway, Raymond Paternoster
openaire   +2 more sources

A running start: Endurance training, Zatopekian pain, and desistance from crime

European Journal of Probation
In this exploratory article, we investigate the impact long-distance running may have on desistance from crime. Based on qualitative interviews with 12 individuals with offending histories, we show that a training plan may provide a sense of structure ...
Thomas Ugelvik, P. Nyvoll, Tore Rokkan
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Desistance From Crime

Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice, 2007
In recent years, the growing literature on the topic of desistance from crime and deviant behavior has generated a large body of knowledge on this dimension of the criminal career. Despite these efforts, it has been suggested that our understanding of the processes underlying desistance remains limited. The objective of the current article is to offer
openaire   +1 more source

Desistance From Crime—to What? Exploring Future Aspirations and Their Implications for Processes of Desistance

Feminist Criminology, 2020
This article presents findings from a longitudinal interview study following the desistance processes of 10 women. While desistance theory primarily focuses on the processual movement away from crime, this article pays close attention to what desisters ...
Robin Gålnander
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Sports and Tertiary Crime Prevention: Desistance from Crime

2022
This chapter reviews attempts to prevent crime at the tertiary level. The tertiary level of crime prevention entails a range of interventions within or outside the criminal justice system to prevent individuals already engaged in criminal activity from reoffending and encouraging them to desist from crime and successfully reintegrating into society ...
Yvon Dandurand, Jon Heidt
openaire   +1 more source

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