Results 251 to 260 of about 45,562 (310)
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To imprison or not to imprison: an analytics model for drug courts
Annals of Operations Research, 2021zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Dursun Delen +3 more
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Journal of Social Work in End-of-Life & Palliative Care, 2021
Two years ago after recently beginning my role as a licensed clinical social worker in Palliative Care, I found myself calling a maximum security prison.
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Two years ago after recently beginning my role as a licensed clinical social worker in Palliative Care, I found myself calling a maximum security prison.
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2016
Providing a comprehensive account of prison populations worldwide, this new work links prison statistics from the last fifteen years with considerations of how prisons and prison populations are managed. It is a major contribution to the knowledge of those currently debating prisons and the use of imprisonment.
ANDREW COYLE +3 more
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Providing a comprehensive account of prison populations worldwide, this new work links prison statistics from the last fifteen years with considerations of how prisons and prison populations are managed. It is a major contribution to the knowledge of those currently debating prisons and the use of imprisonment.
ANDREW COYLE +3 more
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The Psychoanalytic Review, 2004
In his stirring poem “To Althea, from Prison,” Lovelace (1642), who personally experienced imprisonment, suggests that if our minds are free, no cell, no prison, nothing in the world can hold us captive. Yet frequently our patients’ minds become their prisons when they cannot free themselves from the gloom and darkness that has taken over their lives ...
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In his stirring poem “To Althea, from Prison,” Lovelace (1642), who personally experienced imprisonment, suggests that if our minds are free, no cell, no prison, nothing in the world can hold us captive. Yet frequently our patients’ minds become their prisons when they cannot free themselves from the gloom and darkness that has taken over their lives ...
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AJN, American Journal of Nursing, 1987
Looking back several years, I clearly remember a p tient whose care I found emotionally draining. I can see now that the stress I felt at the time was a direct result of a lack of communication among the nursing staff. Twenty-eight-year-old Ms. R had been admitted for a cesarean section.
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Looking back several years, I clearly remember a p tient whose care I found emotionally draining. I can see now that the stress I felt at the time was a direct result of a lack of communication among the nursing staff. Twenty-eight-year-old Ms. R had been admitted for a cesarean section.
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Criminal Justice and Behavior, 2007
The study investigated the effects of time spent in prison and quality of life before prison on male, federally sentenced prisoners' adaptations to imprisonment, controlling for sentence length and prison security level. Data consisted of responses on a self-administered survey completed by 712 prisoners.
Dhami, MK, Ayton, P, Loewenstein, G
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The study investigated the effects of time spent in prison and quality of life before prison on male, federally sentenced prisoners' adaptations to imprisonment, controlling for sentence length and prison security level. Data consisted of responses on a self-administered survey completed by 712 prisoners.
Dhami, MK, Ayton, P, Loewenstein, G
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Royal Institute of Philosophy Lecture Series, 1984
It is appropriate that a lecture in a series on ‘Philosophy and Practice’ should open by considering Bentham's ideas on imprisonment. For Bentham, incontestably a philosopher, was equally incontestably a practical reformer. This, indeed, is a received idea among philosophers; that is to say, most philosophers know that Bentham designed ‘a model prison ...
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It is appropriate that a lecture in a series on ‘Philosophy and Practice’ should open by considering Bentham's ideas on imprisonment. For Bentham, incontestably a philosopher, was equally incontestably a practical reformer. This, indeed, is a received idea among philosophers; that is to say, most philosophers know that Bentham designed ‘a model prison ...
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Children of Imprisoned Fathers
Psychiatry, 1977John Bowlby's influential 1951 World Health Organization monograph, Maternal Care and Mental Health, pointed to a causal relationship between loss of maternal care and disturbed personality development, and had a profound effect on psychiatrists' thinking about antisocial behavior in particular, and character formation in general.
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