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72 Fed. Probation 43 (2008)
Cognitive-Behavioral Interventions: Where They Come from and What They Do

handle is hein.journals/fedpro72 and id is 115 raw text is: September 2008               43
CognAitieBeair a Intevetions:lr
Wher The Com Fro an Wha
TheyaDo

THE NEWS IS OUT and it's not good, but it
comes as no surprise to corrections officials.
Presently, more than one in every one hun-
dred adults in the United States is confined
in local jails and state or federal correctional
facilities (Warren, 2008). The United States
incarcerates more of its citizens than any oth-
er country in the world. At the end of 2006,
there were over five million adults under the
supervision of federal, state, or local proba-
tion or parole authorities (Bureau of Justice
Statistics, 2007). Due to the rising incarcera-
tion rates, many states face significant finan-
cial shortfalls and must make tough decisions
regarding their correctional populations. In
2005, the State of Washington focused its at-
tention on the long-term fiscal consequences
of prison expansion. As a result, the State
Legislature directed the Washington State In-
stitute for Public Policy (Institute) to explore
options to imprisonment. After a thorough re-
view of existing programs and research, the
Institute identified several Evidence Based
Practices (EBP), such as cognitive behavioral
therapy (CBT), that might be effective in re-
ducing recidivism, thus alleviating the need
to build additional prisons (Washington State
Institute for Public Policy, 2006).
Several other states have come to real-
ize that non-violent offenders may be bet-
ter served under community supervision
rather than incarcerated. According to The
Pew Center on the States (2008), No poli-
cy maker would choose this path if it meant
sacrificing public safety. But gradually, some
states are proving that deploying a broad
range of sanctions can protect communities,

punish lawbreakers, and conserve tax dollars
for other pressing public needs (p. 4). This
may reduce the overall inmate population,
but community correction agencies may see
an increase in numbers of individuals under
some type of community-based supervision.
Correctional administrators continue to seek
low-cost, effective treatment interventions
to assist in reducing recidivism and stopping
the criminal justice system's revolving door,
which has become the hallmark of correc-
tions in the United States.
As noted by the Washington State In-
stitute for Public Policy (2006) and many
other researchers (Lipsey, Landenberger, &
Wilson, 2007; Milkman & Wanberg, 2007;
Przybylski, 2008; Pearson, Lipton, Cleland,
& Yee, 2002; Wilson, Bouffard, & MacK-
enzie, 2005; Landenberger & Lipsey, 2005),
CBT is one evidence-based intervention
which shows promise in reducing recidivism.
The purpose of this paper is to acquaint the
reader with CBT, its history, and to explore
several programs that have proven to be ef-
fective in reducing recidivism. This paper
only broadly touches on several of the im-
portant researchers in the fields of cognitive
therapy, behavioral therapy, and CBT. There
are many others who have had an impact on
these therapies and further exploration on the
part of the reader is recommended.
Cognitive Therapy
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy is not a single
method of psychotherapy; rather, CBT is an
umbrella term for therapies with many similar-
ities. CBT is a marriage of sorts between social

Chris Hansen
Chief U.S. Probation Officer
District of Nevada
learning theory, cognitive therapy, and behav-
ioral therapy, all of which initially grew from
experimental psychology (Weishaar, 1993).
From the cognitive therapist's perspec-
tive, an individual's personality is formed by
central values that have developed early in
life as a result of factors in the individual's
environment. These factors serve as the basis
for the way the individual codes, categorizes,
and evaluates their experiences and the stimu-
li they encounter. Cognitive therapists believe
that psychological problems stem from faulty
learning, making incorrect assumptions as the
result of inadequate or incorrect information,
and not being able to adequately distinguish
between imagination and reality (Freeman &
Dattilio, 1992).
Early views of cognition shaping one's
view of the world came from early Greek phi-
losophers including Plato. Philosophers during
the seventeenth and eighteenth century viewed
the world around the concept of the mind con-
trolling reality (Milkman & Wanberg, 2005).
In the nineteenth century cognitive therapy was
practiced by two early psychologists, Wundt
and James, who defined their discipline as the
science of mental life (Allen, 2006). Wundt
and James' research centered around cogni-
tion such as the way individuals perceived,
stored, and used information. Allen (2006)
notes, The methodology involved subjects
trained in introspection, who examined their
own cognitive processes during experimental
tasks. This phase of research was overtaken by
the behaviourist framework during the 1920s,
largely due to difficulties in demonstrating the
validity of self-report data generated by intro-

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