Psychological Research in PrisonsISBN: 978-1-4051-3314-2
Paperback
240 pages
January 2007, Wiley-Blackwell
|
“Psychological Research in Prisons contains some
new and interesting empirical results. But its main achievement is
to put the question mark firmly back into ‘What works?’
Early chapters explore how, often tentative, research findings
about interventions which might reduce reoffending have become
translated into overly prescriptive policies that actually serve to
undermine rather than foster effective practice. This is a book by
psychologists but its readership should be much wider –
policy makers, prison governors, probation and prison staff, and
criminologists will all find much food for thought within its
pages.” Professor Carol Hedderman, University of
Leicester
“It is sure to become a new standard reference book in
this field. It will be a very useful aid to the work of
psychologists in Japan, who are currently introducing CBT within
custodial settings.” Hiroshi Urata, Senior Psychologist,
Wakayama Juvenile Classification Home, Japan