Prisoners Rehabilitation Programs

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Prisoners Rehabilitation Programs



Prisoners Rehabilitation Programs

Introduction

The English prison, despite the significant numbers (over 150,000 men) there are many testimonies. After much research on the net and biographies I have not found that few stories from which it should be noted, a quiet captivity among people that if you did not know culturally (for the British and the Italians were underdeveloped), do not weighed with other harassment. All in all they asked you to work and share with them the food available, which was better than that of many other camps. Fields English were scattered throughout the country in small units and did not create any problems for the public. Then, when the Italians were sent to Scotland one thing they shared with the population, the Catholic religion. Is also why nobody thought to write memories of a time suspended but acceptable. Who did not work in agriculture worked in small factories and enjoyed a certain freedom in the last year of the war. In Scotland that Italians worked to regional railways in Carnforth, detached from the field Beela River. Among the locals still circulating a story that is unbelievable.

Over the last several years, the issue of prisoner reentry has dominated the corrections literature, which should not be surprising considering the volume of exinmates who are returning to our communities each year(Aron, 2010). As a direct result of this nation's increased reliance on imprisonment as a response to criminal behavior, there are record numbers of individuals serving time in state and federal correctional facilities.

Barriers to reentry

Inmates face many obstacles as they transition from the institution back into the community, ranging from meeting basic survival needs such as shelter and employment to addressing long-standing problems with addictions or mental illness. Not only do these barriers present problems for the transitioning offender, they also ultimately “present serious risks to the communities to which large numbers of prisoners return. Toward this end, many researchers have recognized the importance of both understanding how these obstacles effect the reintegration process and the need to implement programs to make these challenges less daunting(Besser, 2011). However, these barriers have only narrowly been considered from an urban perspective, with little regard or guidance on how these obstacles will affect inmates returning to less populated areas. It is clear that prisoner reentry is a problem in rural areas, especially for those inmates and corrections professionals who reside in these areas. It is important to understand the unique challenges offenders face when returning to rural areas. Due in large part to the unavailability of support services and the unique features of rural life, the barriers rural offenders face are often more challenging and require distinct policy interventions. Specifically, this paper examines the roles housing, employment, substance abuse, and mental health play in the reintegration process. While there has been no systematic research on how these issues influence reentry in rural areas, by combining current research on prisoner reentry with knowledge from other disciplines such as sociology, addictions, and health care, it ...
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