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... important to criminal justice such as aggression, substance abuse, being anti-social, and persisten... programs such as "Aggression Replacement Therapy," "Reasoning for Change," "Thinking for Ch...
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... Whether it's family therapy, drug treatment and anger management training, our...Aggression replacement therapy, ART, can teach teens to stop ...
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..., including individual, group and family therapy. . The program uses cognitive-behavioral therapy, ... enhancement, behavior therapy and aggression replacement training (10) are also available to au...
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...William Berry was selected as the replacement by William Sove, the plant's maintenance manager. ... for three weeks while she received talk therapy and various medication. The course of treatment di..."a reasonable control for her anger and aggression." In her final report, Dr. Ionescu described Colem...
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Rogers notes mat success is best achieved by five features: 1 a relative advantage over current practice, 1 compatibility with the existing missions and goals, 3 addressing me complexity of the change through small incremental steps, 4 trial ability of each step with openness to chart midcourse corrections to respond to the environment, and 5 observable results.
... (2004) studied the implementation of Aggression Replacement Therapy (ART) and found mat "competent...
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The paper is in four sections to put the case that discourses of youth in the 21st century context of neoliberal, consumer, capitalist societies, need to move beyond earlier understandings based on psychological and cultural/subcultural studies to harness Foucault's notion of governmentality. First, governmentality, which links government and self-government; and neoliberalism and the entrepreneurial self is discussed. Second, a brief genealogy of 'psychologizing adolescence' and 'sociologizing youth' discourses shows historical shifts in how youth are viewed and positioned. Third, discourses of youth 'at risk' considers youth governmentality in terms of social security, risk assessment, management and insurance, i.e. both economic aspects and therapeutic discourses for managing risk, u...
... constructionist psychology and narrative therapy that these 'truths' have been strongly contested. ... approaches: diversion, mentorship, Aggression Replacement Training, Functional Family Therapy, a...
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Youths behind bars: the expanding net and its financial cost - A. The Trend Toward Incarceration - B. The Economic Costs of the Punitive Reforms - II. The effectiveness of punitive policies: do harsh sanctions reduce crime? - A. The Traditional Regime and the Failure to Prevent Crime - B. Changing Crime Rates and the Effectiveness of Punitive Policies - C. Does Deterrence Work? On Legal Reform and Crime Rates - D. Specific Deterrence-Do Punitive Laws Reduce Recidivism? - E. Lowering Juvenile Crime Rates Through Incapacitation - F. Summary - III. Adolescent development and optimal justice system interventions - A. Lessons from Developmental Research - B. Prisons as Developmental Settings - C. Juvenile Facilities as Developmental Settings - D. Youths in Community-Based Programs - E. Wh...
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... between dominance and sexual aggression. (252) Other scholars have found that sexually agg... motive as a prerequisite to successful therapy. (400) Psychoanalysts do sometimes uncover an unco... countries' practices, including replacement of surgical castration by chemical treatments, see...
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Pressure from Washington has state juvenile justice officials working to improve standards at the L.E. Rader Center in Sand Springs, but the institution is still well below standards set in other states.
Bobbie Huskey of the consulting firm Huskey and Associates told the Office of Juvenile Affairs board of directors on Thursday that many challenges were still ahead for state's largest secure juvenile justice facility.
... interviewing, trauma- focused therapy and skills training, aggression-replacement traini...
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... recidivism, such as Functional Family Therapy and Aggression Replacement Training. . Each of the...