What Else Works?

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Asha Centre
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CBT
CBT Approach
CCP
Child Trust Fund
Cognitive Behavioural
Cognitive Behaviouralism
community-based interventions
Correctional Programmes Assessment Inventory
creative approaches to offender support
criminal justice reform
desistance theory
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ethnic
Good Life
Good Lives Model
Heavy Drinkers Group
management
minority
Minority Ethnic
Minority Ethnic Offenders
national
Neath Port Talbot
offender
Offender Management
offender rehabilitation models
offenders
officer
Populist Punitiveness
practice
Primary Human Goods
probation
Probation Practice
Probation Service
restorative justice
Secondary Desistance
service
Sex Offender
social reintegration
Women Offenders
Young Man
Youth Justice
Youth Justice Workers

Product details

  • ISBN 9781843927679
  • Weight: 720g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Feb 2010
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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What Else Works? has developed out of a growing awareness amongst practitioners that centralized notions of what works and ‘one size fits all’ approaches to work with offenders and other groups is inevitably limited in its scope and effectiveness.

The book seeks to dispel the view of probation service users as 'offenders', and socially excluded people as 'problems' to be managed and treated, and instead considers more creative alternatives to reduce both re-offending and social exclusion. These include working separately with women, black and minority ethnic groups, local community-focussed projects, in education and nature and conservation programmes. The reader is encouraged to think about past and current policy, practice, and the relationship between practitioners and offenders or other socially excluded people. Questions are raised as to whether, and how, practice could be different and contributors explore the theme of creative and change-focussed practice or focus on a particular approach to a practice.

This book will appeal to students on criminal justice, criminology and social work courses, professionals operating in these fields as well as the wider audience of professionals and academics who may engage with these ‘service users’ from a range of policy and practice perspectives.

Jo Brayford is the Criminal and Community Justice Subject Leader at the University of Wales, Newport. She has recently completed a project with Working Links (unemployment, drug misuse) and am currently evaluating a project funded by the Home Office but operational through Newport City Council that aims to reduce alcohol related violence in Newport city centre. John Deering is Senior Lecturer in Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of Wales, Newport. His research interests focus on the criminal justice system, in particular the probation service, and he is also a founder of the Welsh Centre for Crime and Social Justice.