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13 Crime & Delinquency [i] (1967)

handle is hein.journals/cadq13 and id is 1 raw text is: 



                       Foreword

THIS  SPECIAL ISSUE OF Crime and  Delinquency  CONTAINS THE  FULL
text of NCCD's survey of correction in the United States, conducted
in 1966 for the President's Commission  on Law  Enforcement  and
Administration of Justice.
  While  the primary  purpose of the study was  to help the Presi-
dent's Commission  assess the nation-wide status of correction and
provide a basis for recommendations to bring about needed changes,
the report contains data and information  which will undoubtedly
also be valuable in the planning of effective correctional programs
at all levels of government.
   One cannot read the report without being struck by the fact that
American  correctional philosophy is a philosophy of institutionaliza-
tion. Noninstitutional services are regarded as alternatives to im-
prisonment,  rather than the other way  around.  Unless there is a
major  shift in the spirit underlying correction, the next decade will
see a spread of what is already an excessive reliance on institutions
as the nation's principal correctional method.
  While  this is a descriptive and quantitative report, comparison of
the findings with accepted national standards yields much material
from  which qualitative assumptions can be drawn.
   If well-balanced and  effective correctional systems are to be
achieved  throughout  the United  States, problems created by the
fragmentation of services described in the report must be overcome.
Each  state must develop the means to coordinate planning  so that
priorities for program support and  development  can  be given to
those services that show the greatest promise for enabling offenders
to achieve a satisfactory social adjustment.
   State and regional patterns of service will generally produce better
results than will state subsidies for limited local functions adminis-
tratively unrelated to other correctional services. A greater alloca-
tion of state funds and staff for probation, parole, and other forms
of community-based  services will both reduce state expenditures for
institutions and enable the institutions to provide specialized serv-
ices to smaller populations.
  By  providing grants to states according to well-documented priori-
ties, the federal government could promote  uniformly high  stand-
ards in every section of the country. Some  federally operated re-
gional diagnostic and specialized treatment facilities for groups of
the less populated states could facilitate a better use of state funds
for the majority of offenders.
  While  many   new  and  promising programs  are being  operated

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