• Home
  • About
  • Change Strategies
    • Adaptive Leadership
    • Agency Practice Models
    • Chaplains & Volunteers
    • Coaching & the COVE Model
    • Dialogue Coaching & Structural Dynamics
    • Implementation Science
    • Immunity to Change
    • Level of Service / Case Management Inventory
    • Motivational Interviewing
  • ResearchResearch Category Subscription
  • Videos
  • Blog
  • News
Questions?
(503) 559-5752
Email
RegisterLogin
Transforming CorrectionsTransforming Corrections
    • Home
    • About
    • Change Strategies
      • Adaptive Leadership
      • Agency Practice Models
      • Chaplains & Volunteers
      • Coaching & the COVE Model
      • Dialogue Coaching & Structural Dynamics
      • Implementation Science
      • Immunity to Change
      • Level of Service / Case Management Inventory
      • Motivational Interviewing
    • ResearchResearch Category Subscription
    • Videos
    • Blog
    • News

    Research

    • Home
    • Blog
    • Research
    • Religion, the Community, and the Rehabilitation of Criminal Offenders

    Religion, the Community, and the Rehabilitation of Criminal Offenders

    • Posted by Tom O'Connor
    • Categories Research
    • Date March 16, 2017
    Religion, the Community, and the Rehabilitation of Criminal Offenders

    O’Connor, T. P., & Pallone, N. (Eds.). (2002). Religion, the Community, and the Rehabilitation of Criminal Offenders. Binghampton, NY: Haworth Press.

    Explore the relationship between faith-based programs, religion, and offender rehabilitation!

    Religion, the Community, and the Rehabilitation of Criminal Offenders

    Purchase this book on Amazon.com.

    This book reports on current research from several disciplines to help the reader understand the nature and impact of the relationship between faith-based programs, religion, and offender rehabilitation. Religion, the Community, and the Rehabilitation of Criminal Offenders is a unique resource—there has been very little research published on this important topic.

    President Bush’s faith-based initiative recognized that religion plays a role in the justice system and corrections that is overlooked but essential—it increases the role of community and caring in the system in a unique and important way. This pathbreaking book points the way toward a system of faith-based programs that are not only effective but also economical, as these programs are often staffed by volunteers.

    Religion, the Community, and the Rehabilitation of Criminal Offenders addresses important questions regarding the importance and effectiveness of faith-based rehabilitation programs, including:

    • What is the relationship between prison religion and offender rehabilitation?
    • What motivates inmates to become involved with religious programs and activities?
    • What is the prison chaplain’s role in rehabilitation?
    • Are certain religious denominations more effective than others in preventing crime, delinquency, and recidivism?
    • How does religious activity help inmates adjust to the prison environment?
    • What do inmates have to say about the religious programs they encounter within the system?
    • How did Islam develop within American correctional institutions and what changes has the movement gone through in recent years?
    • Why do female African-American inmates tend to resist conversion to Islam while their male counterparts embrace the Muslim faith in increasing numbers?
    • How can sacred texts and social theory be utilized as teaching tools and intervention strategies in the transformation processes of men incarcerated for violent crimes? (A fascinating study from the Sing-Sing prison)
    • and more!
    • Share:
    Tom O'Connor
    Tom O’Connor has spent most of his career focused on change and human development issues in the criminal justice system, putting the learning from the failures and the successes and from a wide body of literature about change into practice through Transforming Corrections.

    Previous post

    The Impact of a Volunteer Prison Ministry Program on the Long-term Recidivism of Federal Inmates
    March 16, 2017

    Next post

    Humanism, Spirituality and Religion in Prison
    April 16, 2018

    You may also like

    Religious Identity and the Long-Term Effects of Religious Involvement, Orientation, and Coping in Prison
    3 October, 2018

    http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0093854818801410   Richard Stansfield Rutgers University – Camden   Thomas O’ Connor Transforming Corrections   Jeff Duncan Oregon Department of Corrections    Abstract Criminological literature has largely ignored the specific religious and spiritual ways people in prison identify and make …

    Women’s Engagement with Humanist, Spiritual and Religious Meaning-Making in Prison
    16 July, 2018

    Religions 2018, 9(6), 171; doi:10.3390/rel9060171 Article Women’s Engagement with Humanist, Spiritual and Religious Meaning-Making in Prison: Longitudinal Study of Its Impact on Recidivism Jeff Duncan 1, Richard Stansfield 2, Steve Hall 3 and Tom O’Connor 4,* 1 Oregon Department of …

    The Impact of a Volunteer Prison Ministry Program on the Long-term Recidivism of Federal Inmates
    16 March, 2017

    Young, M., Gartner, J., O’Connor, T., Larson, D., & Wright, K. (1995). The Impact of a Volunteer Prison Ministry Program on the Long-term Recidivism of Federal Inmates. Journal of Offender Rehabilitation, 22(1/2), 97-118 Download the article PDF HERE The Impact …

    Search

    Categories

    • Blog
    • Corrections
    • Criminal Justice System
    • Research
    • Strategies
    • Videos

    Latest Courses

    Preview Course

    Transforming Corrections Logo

    (503) 559-5752

    transformingcorrections@gmail.com

    Company

    • About Us
    • Schedule a Meeting
    • Blog
    • Contact
    • News

    ©2023 Transforming Corrections
    Website Design by tm Tait Marketing

    • Privacy
    • Terms
    • Sitemap
    Website Design by tm Tait Marketing
    No apps configured. Please contact your administrator.

    Login with your site account

    No apps configured. Please contact your administrator.
    Lost your password?

    Not a member yet? Register now

    Register a new account

    No apps configured. Please contact your administrator.

    Are you a member? Login now