'This book brings together a range of authors to 'problematize' a topic which, too often, is treated as an orthodoxy. It needs to be compulsory reading on probation training courses, and I would certainly recommend it to students.' - Professor Mike Nash, Emeritus Professor of Criminology, University of Portsmouth, UK
The risk assessment process, the interventions and treatment commenced as a result of it and the theory behind it are central to the administration of criminal justice programmes around the world. Most youth and adult corrections departments routinely conduct risk assessments, which are then used to inform the nature and intensity of subsequent criminal justice interventions.
In this unique and important text, a team of the world's leading researchers in the field of criminal justice come together to provide a critique of this risk paradigm, and to provide practical guidance for professionals, students and academics on how to move to a more effective way of working with offenders.
Divided into three sections, the book provides coverage of topics such as:
- The development of risk assessment in criminal justice practice, and its advantages and disadvantages.
- The significance of risk factor research in understanding and explaining juvenile delinquency – as well as the problems it creates.
- The argument that the risk paradigm fails to accommodate diversity, further disadvantaging women, ethnic minorities and other marginalized groups.
- The various ways in which real or imagined risk posed by offenders has been regulated under the risk paradigm, the powerful influence of media reporting, and ways of moving 'beyond risk' to support successful reintegration of offenders.
- Ways forward for criminal justice interventions that do not rely on risk, but focus rather on the vitally important aspects of social context, relationships and motivation.
With strong links between theory and practice, Beyond the Risk Paradigm in Criminal Justice provides a fresh new direction for criminal justice work.
PART I: THE RISK PARADIGM IN PRACTICE
1. The Rise of the Risk Paradigm in Criminal Justice; Gwen Robinson
2. Three Narratives of Risk: Corrections, Critique and Context; Peter Raynor
PART II: THE CONSEQUENCES OF THE RISK PARADIGM
3. Risk Assessment in Practice; Chris Trotter
4. Taking the Risk out of Youth Culture; Stephen Case and Kevin Haines
5. Justice, Risk and Diversity; Gill McIvor
6. Drugs, Mental Disorder and Risk; David Rose
7. Programmes for Domestic Violence Perpetrators; Dave Morran
8. Risk, Regulation and the Reintegration of Sexual Offenders; Anne Marie McAlinden
9. The Collateral Consequences of Risk; Fergus McNeill
10. Probation, Risk and the Power of the Media; Wendy Fitzgibbon
PART III: WAYS FORWARD
11. Putting Rrisk in its Place; Craig Schwalbe and Gina Vincent
12. Dynamic and Protective Factors in the Treatment of Offenders: a Reconceptualization; Tony Ward and Imogen McDonald
13. An Unfinished Alternative: Towards a Relational Paradigm; Beth and Allan Weaver
14. Changing Risks, Risking Change; Chris Trotter, Gill McIvor and Fergus McNeill.
A risk paradigm has come to dominate many human services in the Western countries over the last twenty years. This tends towards an increasing ‘logic of precaution’ in both policy and professional practice, with unintended negative consequences for those that use the services, those that work in them and wider society. The aim of this series is to critically engage with this paradigm in order to open up new and creative ways for taking policy and practice forward. Each book in the series will investigate the nature, origins, development and evidence for the increasing dominance of the paradigm in its particular field of practice.
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Chris Trotter is a Professor in the Department of Social Work at Monash University, Australia.
Gill McIvor is Professor of Criminology at the University of Stirling, UK.
Fergus McNeill is Professor of Criminology and Social Work at the University of Glasgow, UK.