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58 Prison J. 2 (1978)

handle is hein.journals/prsjrnl58 and id is 1 raw text is: 




                          Editorial

    Correctional treatment  has been  under  considerable criticism
in recent years from its traditional friends as well as foes for several
reasons. First, it has failed to demonstrate any significant results
in recidivism statistics. Secondly, when linked to parole or pretrial
diversion, its involuntary provisions for the offender have tended to
weaken  its effectiveness and have turned it into a game to be played.
Thirdly, the revival of the philosophy  that prison is punishment
has drawn  attention away  from  rehabilitative efforts.

    In the pendulum   swing  of correctional theory this adjustment
may  prove  timely. At very least, it has modified an unwarranted
optimism  that rehabilitation will be the solution to the problem of
crime.
    Having  passed through  this era, however, we believe that it is
time to return our attention to correctional treatment without illu-
sions. Throughout  the  recent debate  the defenders  of treatment
have  argued that treatment programs  have never been  given a full
opportunity to prove themselves, but have been thrust to the periph-
ery of the correctional process by security concerns. Manpower sta-
tistics comparing the number   of program  and custodial personnel
are often appropriately cited in this regard. More  fundamentally,
one  can argue that when  government  assumes  a person as a ward
in an institution, it is obligated legally and morally to provide ser-
vices (educational and  psychological) that would  be available in
the community   on a voluntary basis.
     Our hope  is that we will enter into a new era of correctional
treatment. This  issue of The Prison  Journal is dedicated to that
proposition.
                                              R. A.D.


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