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87 Prison J. 3 (2007)

handle is hein.journals/prsjrnl87 and id is 1 raw text is: 





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                                                     11 2(07 Sg, Puications
Introduction           to  the Special              10.11   2    2

Issue                                                           hosted at
                                                     http://ine~iicagepub.com
The   Criminal Justice Drug Abuse
Treatment Studies (CJ-DATS)

Harry  K. Wexler
National Development and Research Institutes, Inc.,
New  York, NY
Michael  L. Prendergast
University of California, Los Angeles
Gerald Melnick
National Development and Research Institutes, Inc.,
New  York, NY




T   he sizeable increases in the population of state and federal prison since
     1990 is largely due to tougher laws on drug crimes and to the corre-
sponding increase in the number of convictions and incarcerations for drug
crimes and crimes related to drug use (Belenko, 2006; Mumola, 1999). As
a result, the prison and parole populations have large numbers of people
who have histories of drug and alcohol use, a significant fraction of whom
meet lifetime criteria for abuse or dependence (Peters, Greenbaum, Edens,
Carter, & Ortiz, 1998). Drug use by offenders under community supervi-
sion increases the risk of arrest and reincarceration (Langan & Levin,
2002). Reducing drug use, along with addressing other offender needs, has
become  an important strategy for promoting successful reentry and for
bringing the nation's prison overcrowding problem under control. As noted
in previous special issues of The Prison Journal (Simpson, Wexler, &
Inciardi, 1999; Wexler, Prendergast, & Melnick, 2004), prison-based treat-
ment, especially when followed by community treatment during parole, has
been shown to reduce recidivism relative to no treatment or minimal treat-
ment. More recently, researchers have begun to realize that the high preva-
lence of drug abuse among offenders (Belenko, 2005; Belenko & Peugh,
2004) and the other problems that they experience require a coordinated,
systemic approach among all of the agencies that are involved in providing
supervision and services to this population.


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