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Chap 8 What is the current "rehab movement" about what drives it and who funds it? Not Liberal - rehab in prison - not diversion Federally funded - focus on in-prison drug treatment (Multi-billion dollar industry created by Federal grants!) Chap 8 What are the authors’ two criteria for evaluating the effectiveness of prison-based programs? 1. Significant and long lasting effects - must “work” (More effective than “aging out”??) 2. Potential for wide use with prisoners -Not just the best prospects (net widening problem and “return on investment”) Chap 8 Why are the "highly touted" treatment programs declining as prison pops grow? 1. Programs are expensive - seen as “soft on crime” 2. Programs don’t work - relapse & recidivism rates Note: Even if they worked, they would have little effect on crime rates - most crime is not by ex-cons Chap 8 What are the main factors related to criminal behavior (and how do they interact)? Stabilizing aging job marriage children and De-stabilizing factors: social stress/poverty isolation alcohol/other drugs Chap 8 "What does work" (page 165-167)? Martinson “nothing works” vs. Palmer some programs work Well designed, well implemented, well administered, and correctly evaluated programs can work. ** Berk & Rauma study in 1980s (bottom page 163) money and jobs!! **(NYT Illinois article) Chap 8 What are the main arguments for boot camps? “Punishment builds character” + cheaper than prison What does the research indicate? Improve attitudes while in (stability??) Don’t improve recidivism (back to unstable environ) Note: Just another grant-driven industry?? Note: aftercare programs might help Chap 8 What are main arguments for and assumptions about prison drug treatment programs? CASA - Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse Note: Lying with statistics Will take a closer look at this later. Chap 8 What is "sample selection bias"? “In house” eval vs. “Success rates” based on selecting best prospects - don’t count dropouts. Short term effects only. Biased External/prof eval Based on randomized matched groups. All subjects Long term effects Unbiased Chap 8 What are the authors' four conclusions? 1. 2. 3. 4. No impact on overall/serious crime rates. Effects of treatment on indivs are mixed. Most programs poorly designed & too small. No reliable evidence of “macro” success. (also last paragraph is very important). Chap 8 ** Last paragraph page 179-180 Rehab in prison is still “good” for two reasons: 1. help some prisoners turn their lives around 2. humanize prisons But rehab should not be used to justify imprisonment (conservative approach) Chap 8 Drug treatment in prison - a closer look (mostly follows authors’ discussion) Drug treatment nationwide is an $8 billion a year industry with an active set of political lobbyists to ensure the flow of money. Promise is to reduce/eliminate serious crime. “If something sounds too good to be true...” Chap 8 CASA claims make sense at first - based on cost-benefit analysis Cost of treatment is high ($6000 per prisoner, $6 billion to treat 1 million prisoners) But preventing a huge amount of crime will save much more than that in the long run! So, it is worth the “investment”! Chap 8 Based on 3 assumptions (p. 170) First assumption - Most prisoners are drug users and drugs cause most crime - 100 crimes a year each. If this were true, virtually all crime would be committed by untreated drug users released from jails/prisons (100 million crimes!!) The authors show the absurdity of this claim. Chap 8 CASA vastly over-est “caught offender” rates (+ most caught offenders age out without treatment) Also, remember the low clearance rates more than 90% of crime done by people who don’t get caught. Using more realistic assumptions - 10% reduction in crime IF all prisoners are treated AND if the treatment works (long-lasting effects!). Chap 8 Second assumption - treatment for all prisoners: authors show why this doesn’t make sense either 25% have no drug problem 25% are in jails - too short-term for drug treatment 25% are in medical facilities, working, full-time educ No more than 25% are available for drug treatment - and some of these don’t want treatment - coercive or voluntary?? Chap 8 So, if treatment works, 10% reduction (caught offenders) becomes 2 or 3% (1/4 of 10% caught). Third assumption - does treatment work?? Weak evidence that it works for those who want it and who complete the programs - but the studies are not very reliable and even at that treatment doesn’t work much better than doing nothing at all (aging out). + large proportion typically don’t complete program! Chap 8 Bottom line (realistic assumptions) If 10% of offenders get caught and incarcerated, and 1/4 of those are available for drug treatment, and drug treatment works about half the time, Result would be about a 1% reduction in crime! Why is the drug treatment industry taken seriously?? Political myths about drugs and crime? Chap 8 So neither conservative (present) drug treatment nor liberal drug treatment have much potential for lowering crime rates - but diversion programs and voluntary treatment can help by helping some prisoners improve themselves and by humanizing the prisons. Note: I think education programs like the one in Texas are a much better investment.