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Auteur
Armon J. Tamatea (Rongowhak ta; Te Aitanga-a-M haki), PhD., PGDipPsych(Clin) is a clinical psychologist who served as a clinician and senior research advisor for Ara Poutama Aotearoa/Department of Corrections (New Zealand) before being appointed senior lecturer in psychology at the University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand. He has worked extensively in the assessment and treatment of violent and sexual offenders and contributed to the design and implementation of an experimental prison-based violence prevention programme for high-risk offenders diagnosed with psychopathy. His research interests include institutional violence, psychopathy, New Zealand gang communities, and exploring culturally informed approaches to offender management. Armon currently divides his professional time between research, teaching, supervision, and clinical practice in the criminal justice arena.
Andrew J. Day is an enterprise professor in the School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Melbourne, Australia. His interests are in criminological psychology, especially the development of interventions to improve wellbeing and reduce risk.
David J. Cooke is a chartered forensic and chartered clinical psychologist in Australian Catholic University. He has long-standing research and clinical interests in violence risk; including the risks created by the ecologies of institutions. He is a co-author of PRISM and has carried out PRISM evaluations in institutions in many countries.
Texte du rabat
Preventing Prison Violence introduces the idea of 'prison ecologies' - a multi-layered perspective to understanding prison violence as a 'product' of human, environment (social and physical), systemic, and societal influences - and how an ecological approach is helpful to prevention efforts.
Résumé
Preventing Prison Violence introduces the idea of 'prison ecologies' a multi-layered perspective to understanding prison violence as a 'product' of human, environment (social and physical), systemic, and societal influences and how an ecological approach is helpful to prevention efforts.
Contenu
Introduction: Steps to an Ecology of Prisons
PART ONE: KEY KNOWLEDGE
Chapter 1: Understanding Prison Violence: An Ecological Perspective
Chapter 2: Prison Violence: Definition and Measurement
Chapter 3: Toward a Gendered Ecological Approach for Understanding Prison Violence
Chapter 4: Elucidating the Ecology of Prisons: A look through the PRISM
Chapter 5: Preventing Prison Violence
PART TWO: VIOLENCE IN CONTEXT
Chapter 6: New Zealand Prison Violence: History, Prevalence and Organisational Responses
Chapter 7: What Do People in Prison Think about Violence?
Chapter 8: Correctional Staff: Roles and Experiences
PART THREE: CRITICAL ISSUES
Chapter 9 Critical issue 1: Colonialism, Settler Colonialism, and Supporting Indigenous as Violent
Chapter 10: Critical issue 2: Gangs
Chapter 11 Critical Issue 3: Prison Social Climates
Chapter 12: Critical Issue 4: The Prison Environment
PART FOUR: POSSIBILITIES AND SOLUTIONS
Chapter 13: An Approach to Preventing Prison Violence
Chapter 14: Exploring the Wicked Problem of Violence in Prison: Capturing the Complexity of Contexts
Chapter 15: Violence in Prisons: What Have We Learned So Far?