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Offender Rehabilitation Issues

Critical Lessons for Criminology, Criminal Justice, and Public Policy

Charles B.A. Ubah

Most of the studies that discuss offender rehabilitation focus on the debate over whether prison-based education programs work, ignoring the important issues that these programs undertake. Using a critical approach, Offender Rehabilitation Issues: Critical Lessons for Criminology, Criminal Justice, and Public Policy fills the gap by highlighting the offender rehabilitation programs that continue to divide scholars, policy makers, correctional practitioners, students, and the public. This book demonstrates and reaffirms that offender rehabilitation programs and recidivism rates are important and critical social issues that do not exist in a vacuum, are complex interacting social processes and issues with broader social, economic, legal, and political environmental forces and pressures.

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Lexington Books
Pages: 162 • Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-1-66692-279-0 • Hardback • September 2023 • $95.00 • (£73.00)
Subjects: Social Science / Criminology, Law / Criminal LAW / General, Political Science / Public Policy / General

Charles B. A. Ubah is professor of criminology, criminal justice, law, sociology and public policy at Georgia College and State University.

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Chapter 1: The Focal Issues of Offender Rehabilitation

Chapter 2: Individual Change Perspectives of Offender Rehabilitation

Chapter 3: Pessimistic Reaction to Individual Change: Perspectives of Offender Rehabilitation

Chapter 4: A Critical Examination of Empirical Evidence of Offender Rehabilitation-Correctional Education

Chapter 5: Reaffirming the Limits of Offender Rehabilitation but With Caution

Chapter 6: Using Recidivism Rate as the Sole Indicator of Prison-Based Rehabilitation Usefulness

Chapter 7: The History of Pell Grants for Prison Inmates College Education

Chapter 8: Abolition of Pell Grants for Higher Education of Prisoners

Chapter 9: Second Chance Act and Second Chance Pell Pilot Program: The End of Abolition of Pell Grants for Prisoners Education

Chapter 10: Limitation, Direction for Future Research, and Conclusion

References

About the Author

In 1974 sociologist Robert Martinson and colleagues published an apparently negative meta-analysis of 231 research studies on prison education and programming. The study, entitled "What Works?" was published in the journal The Public Interest and covered research over 22 years. The impact was devastating. Critics quickly concluded that nothing works, though Martinson never used those words and later sought to repute that interpretation. Yet, two decades later Congress passed an act eliminating Pell grants in a frenzy of tough-on-crime legislation, which had provided college-in-prison education from hundreds of postsecondary institutions. Ubah offers a lugubrious assessment of an important topic. He provides a useful observation: Martinson's analysis, carefully read, showed that close to half of prison education programs had some salutary benefits. For instance, a report from the RAND Corporation found that in-prison college education reduced recidivism by 43 percent. More recent studies of prison-based education also "overwhelmingly indicate" that education in prison reduces recidivism rates (p. 71). Pell grants are again becoming available to prison systems across the nation, raising the hope that untapped potential behind the walls can be developed. Recommended. Faculty and professionals.


— Choice Reviews


Many books have been published on institutional corrections, but this Offender Rehabilitation Issues text provides the most effective mechanisms for ameliorating recidivism rate. Undeniably, recidivism rate is the most significant, vital dependable measure of the effectiveness of a correctional strategy.


— Obi N. I. Ebbe, Professor Emeritus, The University Tennesse, Chattanooga


Ubah takes a detailed historical and critical look at post-secondary correctional education from its origins to today’s renewal of Pell Grants for those incarcerated. He posits that critical cautions be employed when relying on, and/or neglecting the recidivism measure, self-selection biases, and the short-comings of individual change perspectives. His grounded approach goes deeper than much of the previous literature, and the complexities identified promote a more meaningful consideration of the context, quality, humanity, and expectations of higher ed in prison.


— Cathryn A. Chappell, Ashland University


Offender Rehabilitation Issues

Critical Lessons for Criminology, Criminal Justice, and Public Policy

Cover Image
Hardback
Summary
Summary
  • Most of the studies that discuss offender rehabilitation focus on the debate over whether prison-based education programs work, ignoring the important issues that these programs undertake. Using a critical approach, Offender Rehabilitation Issues: Critical Lessons for Criminology, Criminal Justice, and Public Policy fills the gap by highlighting the offender rehabilitation programs that continue to divide scholars, policy makers, correctional practitioners, students, and the public. This book demonstrates and reaffirms that offender rehabilitation programs and recidivism rates are important and critical social issues that do not exist in a vacuum, are complex interacting social processes and issues with broader social, economic, legal, and political environmental forces and pressures.

Details
Details
  • Lexington Books
    Pages: 162 • Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
    978-1-66692-279-0 • Hardback • September 2023 • $95.00 • (£73.00)
    Subjects: Social Science / Criminology, Law / Criminal LAW / General, Political Science / Public Policy / General
Author
Author
  • Charles B. A. Ubah is professor of criminology, criminal justice, law, sociology and public policy at Georgia College and State University.

Table of Contents
Table of Contents
  • Acknowledgments

    Introduction

    Chapter 1: The Focal Issues of Offender Rehabilitation

    Chapter 2: Individual Change Perspectives of Offender Rehabilitation

    Chapter 3: Pessimistic Reaction to Individual Change: Perspectives of Offender Rehabilitation

    Chapter 4: A Critical Examination of Empirical Evidence of Offender Rehabilitation-Correctional Education

    Chapter 5: Reaffirming the Limits of Offender Rehabilitation but With Caution

    Chapter 6: Using Recidivism Rate as the Sole Indicator of Prison-Based Rehabilitation Usefulness

    Chapter 7: The History of Pell Grants for Prison Inmates College Education

    Chapter 8: Abolition of Pell Grants for Higher Education of Prisoners

    Chapter 9: Second Chance Act and Second Chance Pell Pilot Program: The End of Abolition of Pell Grants for Prisoners Education

    Chapter 10: Limitation, Direction for Future Research, and Conclusion

    References

    About the Author

Reviews
Reviews
  • In 1974 sociologist Robert Martinson and colleagues published an apparently negative meta-analysis of 231 research studies on prison education and programming. The study, entitled "What Works?" was published in the journal The Public Interest and covered research over 22 years. The impact was devastating. Critics quickly concluded that nothing works, though Martinson never used those words and later sought to repute that interpretation. Yet, two decades later Congress passed an act eliminating Pell grants in a frenzy of tough-on-crime legislation, which had provided college-in-prison education from hundreds of postsecondary institutions. Ubah offers a lugubrious assessment of an important topic. He provides a useful observation: Martinson's analysis, carefully read, showed that close to half of prison education programs had some salutary benefits. For instance, a report from the RAND Corporation found that in-prison college education reduced recidivism by 43 percent. More recent studies of prison-based education also "overwhelmingly indicate" that education in prison reduces recidivism rates (p. 71). Pell grants are again becoming available to prison systems across the nation, raising the hope that untapped potential behind the walls can be developed. Recommended. Faculty and professionals.


    — Choice Reviews


    Many books have been published on institutional corrections, but this Offender Rehabilitation Issues text provides the most effective mechanisms for ameliorating recidivism rate. Undeniably, recidivism rate is the most significant, vital dependable measure of the effectiveness of a correctional strategy.


    — Obi N. I. Ebbe, Professor Emeritus, The University Tennesse, Chattanooga


    Ubah takes a detailed historical and critical look at post-secondary correctional education from its origins to today’s renewal of Pell Grants for those incarcerated. He posits that critical cautions be employed when relying on, and/or neglecting the recidivism measure, self-selection biases, and the short-comings of individual change perspectives. His grounded approach goes deeper than much of the previous literature, and the complexities identified promote a more meaningful consideration of the context, quality, humanity, and expectations of higher ed in prison.


    — Cathryn A. Chappell, Ashland University


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