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1

Hurley, Martha Henderson. Correctional administration and change management. Boca Raton: Taylor & Francis, 2010.

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2

Dena, Hanley, ed. Correctional administration and change management. Boca Raton: Taylor & Francis, 2010.

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3

United States. Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention., ed. Juvenile correctional education: A time for change. [Washington, D.C.]: U.S. Dept. of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, 1994.

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4

Juvenile correctional reform: Two decades of policy and procedural change. Albany, N.Y: State University of New York Press, 1988.

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5

California. Governor (2003- : Schwarzenegger). A government for the people for a change: Governor's reorganization plan #2 : reforming California's youth and adult correctional system. Sacramento, Calif: [Office of the Governor, 2005.

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6

Schwarzenegger), California Governor (2003 :. A government for the people for a change: Governor's reorganization plan 1 : reforming California's boards and commissions. [Sacramento, CA: Governor's Office, 2005.

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7

W, Wanberg Kenneth, and Gagliardi Barbara A, eds. Criminal conduct and substance abuse treatment for women in correctional settings: Adjunct provider's guide : female-focused strategies for self-improvement and change-pathways to responsible living. Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications, 2008.

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8

Benke, Ralph L. Accounting changes and error corrections. Arlington, VA: Tax Management, 2008.

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9

McGarrell, Edmund F. Change in New York's juvenile corrections system. Albany, N.Y: Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government, State University of New York, 1985.

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10

Cahalan, Margaret Werner. Policy advocacy parameters and change in three occupational/reform organizations, 1870-1976: A comparative content analysis of the policy advocacy of the American Correctional Association, the International Association of Chiefs of Police and the National Council on Crime and Delinquency. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms International Dissertation Information Service, 1987.

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11

Maurice, Vanstone, ed. Understanding community penalties: Probation, policy, and social change. Phildelphia, Pa: Open University, 2002.

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12

Staff supervision in the probation service: Keeping pace with change. Aldershot, Hants, England: Avebury, 1988.

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13

Liu, Ying. Modelling mortgage rate changes with a smooth transition error-correction model. [Ottawa]: Bank of Canada, 2001.

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14

Partners in change: The twelve step referral handbook for probation, parole, and community corrections. Lanham, Md: American Correctional Association, 1996.

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15

Edmonton Victim Offender Mediation Society., ed. Restorative justice: A vision for healing and change. Edmonton, Alberta: Edmonton Victim Offender Mediation Society, 1998.

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16

Helping delinquents change: A treatment manual of social learning approaches. New York: Haworth Press, 1986.

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17

Romanov, Aleksandr. Penal law of the Russian Federation: General and Special parts. ru: INFRA-M Academic Publishing LLC., 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/925785.

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The focus is on the subject and objectives of penal law of the Russian Federation, its sources and methods, types of penal norms, history and types of penal systems, the provisions of the Criminal Executive code of the Russian Federation, other penal laws and normative legal acts on the activities of bodies in charge of execution of punishments, exercising control and supervision over conditionally sentenced persons and persons with a suspended sentence. The characteristic of organization and activity of criminal-Executive system of the Russian Federation, highlights the issues of its reforms. Detail the issues of legal status of convicts established the order and conditions of execution and serving sentences, the use of other measures of criminal-legal nature, means of correction of convicts, providing medical care to prisoners, the performance requirements for the serving of sentences, organisation of support of liberated and control over them. Meets the requirements of Federal state educational standards of higher education of the last generation. For students of law faculties of educational institutions of higher education, enrolled in the academic programs of bachelor, specialist, master and post-graduate students, teachers, practical workers of law enforcement bodies and all those interested in issues of corrections, legal status of prisoners, the penal laws and the application of other measures of criminal-legal nature.
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18

Melendy, Robert F. Bang-bang control development of permeability changes in a membrane model.: Permeability correction mechanisms inherent in the Hodgkin-Huxley model. Corvallis, OR: OSU Libraries, 1997.

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19

Paulin, Judy. The Rotorua Second Chance Community-Managed Restorative Justice Programme: An evaluation. Wellington, N.Z: Ministry of Justice, 2005.

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20

John, Wooldredge, ed. Forty studies that changed criminal justice: Explorations into the history of criminal justice research. Upper Saddle, N.J: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2010.

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21

Give consumers a choice: Privacy implications of U.S. Postal Service national change of address program : forty-third report. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1992.

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22

Correctional Management: Change and Control in Correctional Organizations. Waveland Press, 1986.

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23

Hurley, Martha Henderson, and Dena Hanley. Correctional Administration and Change Management. Routledge, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/b15808.

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24

Change, challenge, and choices: Women's role in modern corrections. Laurel, Md: American Correctional Association, 1991.

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25

Russell, Michael Lee. Personality change, job satisfaction and values in Washington State correctional officers: A longitudinal study. 1989.

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26

Correctional Rehabilitation and Therapeutic Communities: Reducing Recidivism Through Behavior Change. Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.

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27

Appelbaum, Kenneth L., Robert L. Trestman, and Jeffrey L. Metzner. The Future of Correctional Psychiatry. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199360574.003.0071.

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Recent decades have seen many advances in the knowledge base and practice standards for correctional psychiatry. In many ways, however, the field remains in the early stages of development. As it continues to mature in the coming years, we hope and expect to see further progress. Establishment of evidence-based clinical practices and a firm foundation for ethical standards has begun, and the momentum will continue to build. The questions and dilemmas that we present do not all lend themselves to easy consensus. They do, however, require attention and resolution. Custodial and clinical practices in correctional settings continue to evolve and change. Some of those changes may occur in a rapid and dramatic way. Psychiatry should stake-out a place in the forefront of the ongoing debate. By being proactive instead of reactive we will have a greater chance of influencing the outcomes and we will fulfill our responsibilities for the inmate patients who we serve. No one can predict with certainty what the future holds. We feel safe, however, in predicting that changes, incremental and perhaps revolutionary, will occur. In this chapter we identify opportunities to expand the evidence-base of correctional psychiatry, the need to refine practice guidelines, and the role that psychiatry might play in influencing the use of incarceration. As part of our review we describe what we believe the future may hold in store for our subspecialty. We hope that this textbook contributes to a picture of where things stand and a vision of where we need to go.
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28

Appelbaum, Kenneth L., Robert L. Trestman, and Jeffrey L. Metzner. The Future of Correctional Psychiatry. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199360574.003.0071_update_001.

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Recent decades have seen many advances in the knowledge base and practice standards for correctional psychiatry. In many ways, however, the field remains in the early stages of development. As it continues to mature in the coming years, we hope and expect to see further progress. Establishment of evidence-based clinical practices and a firm foundation for ethical standards has begun, and the momentum will continue to build. The questions and dilemmas that we present do not all lend themselves to easy consensus. They do, however, require attention and resolution. Custodial and clinical practices in correctional settings continue to evolve and change. Some of those changes may occur in a rapid and dramatic way. Psychiatry should stake-out a place in the forefront of the ongoing debate. By being proactive instead of reactive we will have a greater chance of influencing the outcomes and we will fulfill our responsibilities for the inmate patients who we serve. No one can predict with certainty what the future holds. We feel safe, however, in predicting that changes, incremental and perhaps revolutionary, will occur. In this chapter we identify opportunities to expand the evidence-base of correctional psychiatry, the need to refine practice guidelines, and the role that psychiatry might play in influencing the use of incarceration. As part of our review we describe what we believe the future may hold in store for our subspecialty. We hope that this textbook contributes to a picture of where things stand and a vision of where we need to go.
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29

Innes, Chris. Healing Corrections: The Future of Imprisonment. Northeastern University Press, 2015.

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30

Innes, Chris. Healing Corrections: The Future of Imprisonment. Northeastern University Press, 2015.

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31

Organizational Change Through Individual Empowerment: Applying Social Psychology in Prisons and Policing. American Psychological Association, 2014.

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32

Perry, Linda A. Committment to change: Ex-inmates' intentions to cease criminal activity. 1985.

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33

McMurran, Mary. Motivating Offenders to Change: A Guide to Enhancing Engagement in Therapy. Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, John, 2003.

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34

Mary, McMurran, ed. Motivating offenders to change: A guide to enhancing engagement in therapy. Chichester: Wiley, 2002.

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35

Alexander, Charles Nathaniel. Ego development, personality and behavior change in inmates practicing the Transcendental Meditation technique or participating in other progams: A cross-sectional and longitudinal study. 1985.

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36

Feinman, Clarice, and Claudine Schweber. Criminal Justice Politics and Women: The Aftermath of Legally Mandated Change. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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37

Feinman, Clarice, and Claudine Schweber. Criminal Justice Politics and Women: The Aftermath of Legally Mandated Change. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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38

Claudine, SchWeber, and Feinman Clarice, eds. Criminal justice, politics, and women: The aftermath of legally mandated change. New York: Haworth Press, 1985.

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39

Feinman, Clarice, and Claudine Schweber. Criminal Justice Politics and Women: The Aftermath of Legally Mandated Change. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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40

Feinman, Clarice, and Claudine Schweber. Criminal Justice Politics and Women: The Aftermath of Legally Mandated Change. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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41

Gorton, Joe. Organizational Change, Environmental Uncertainty, and Managerial Control in a Large Post-Reform American Prison System (Criminology Studies, V. 18). Edwin Mellen Press, 2002.

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42

Knoll, James L. Evaluation of malingering in corrections. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199360574.003.0023.

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Recognizing when someone is not being truthful is challenging. Multiple tests of malingering have been developed for forensic purposes. Malingered mental illness in the correctional setting poses a complicated dilemma. Many factors change the typical presentation and detection strategies, and inaccurate determinations have serious consequences. Detection requires a thorough knowledge of the characteristics of genuine psychiatric illness, a systematic approach to evaluation, identification of objective indicators, and use of scientifically validated psychological tests when necessary. The detection of malingering in corrections is necessary to ensure the judicious use of limited resources, and to bring diagnostic accuracy to assessments. A comprehensive, systematic approach is required. The clinician must assemble evidence from a thorough evaluation, clinical records, collateral data, and psychological testing when necessary. A conclusion of malingering is best supported with multiple factual bases. The correctional setting provides many unique challenges to detecting malingered mental illness. The finding that an inmate patient has malingered symptoms does not rule out the presence of true mental illness, and a determination of malingering should not exclude the inmate from receiving needed mental health services. How structured tests and other clinical skills may be used in treatment decisions in jail and prison settings is the content of this chapter.
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43

Knoll, James L. Evaluation of malingering in corrections. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199360574.003.0023_update_001.

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Recognizing when someone is not being truthful is challenging. Multiple tests of malingering have been developed for forensic purposes. Malingered mental illness in the correctional setting poses a complicated dilemma. Many factors change the typical presentation and detection strategies, and inaccurate determinations have serious consequences. Detection requires a thorough knowledge of the characteristics of genuine psychiatric illness, a systematic approach to evaluation, identification of objective indicators, and use of scientifically validated psychological tests when necessary. The detection of malingering in corrections is necessary to ensure the judicious use of limited resources, and to bring diagnostic accuracy to assessments. A comprehensive, systematic approach is required. The clinician must assemble evidence from a thorough evaluation, clinical records, collateral data, and psychological testing when necessary. A conclusion of malingering is best supported with multiple factual bases. The correctional setting provides many unique challenges to detecting malingered mental illness. The finding that an inmate patient has malingered symptoms does not rule out the presence of true mental illness, and a determination of malingering should not exclude the inmate from receiving needed mental health services. How structured tests and other clinical skills may be used in treatment decisions in jail and prison settings is the content of this chapter.
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44

Fellner, Jamie. Human rights. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199360574.003.0004.

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In this chapter, North American and international issues are reviewed covering the range of human rights issues, challenges, and controversies that exist in correctional mental health care. This chapter provides a brief overview of the key internationally recognized human rights that should inform the work of correctional mental health professionals. Human rights reflect a humanistic vision predicated on the foundation of human dignity, which complement the ethical principles of beneficence and non-maleficence. The human rights framework supports correctional mental health staff in their efforts to protect patients from harm and provide them the treatment they need. Human rights provide a universally acknowledged set of precepts that can be used during internal and external advocacy. Mental health professionals should not – consistent with their human rights and ethical obligations – acquiesce silently to conditions of confinement that harm prisoners and violate human rights. They are obligated not only to treat inmates with mental illness with independence and compassion, but to strive to change policies and practices that abuse inmates and violate their rights, even those that involve custodial decisions (e.g. segregation, use of force, restraints). In short, for practitioners who want improved policies and practices, human rights offers a powerful rationale and vision for a different kind of correctional mental health services. The more correctional mental health practitioners embrace and advocate for human rights, the greater the likelihood prisoners’ rights will be respected.
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45

Liebling, Alison, and Deborah Kant. The Two Cultures. Edited by John Wooldredge and Paula Smith. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199948154.013.11.

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This chapter assesses how correctional officers exercise their authority over inmates. How officers influence prison climates is discussed in conjunction with their roles in impeding or facilitating the goals of confinement, and in particular their impact on a climate supportive of offender change. The authors draw from ethnography on prisons across the United Kingdom to explain some correctional officers’ distrust of managers, their cynicism toward correctional reform, and their alienation from liberal humanitarian goals. Examples of officer “cultures,” informal rules of conduct, and the origins of cultural values are identified toward the end of discussing how such values might shape inmates’ attitudes toward legal authority. An important question is whether the origins of these cultural values are structural and inherent in the prison, or whether these cultures differ so greatly across prisons that other explanations must play a part.
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46

Lucken, Karol, and Thomas G. Blomberg. American Corrections: Reform Without Change. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199730148.013.0014.

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47

Department of Corrections: Change of director audit. Salem, Or: Secretary of State, Audits Division, 2002.

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48

Division, Oregon Audits, ed. Department of Corrections: Change of director audit. Salem, Or: Secretary of State, Audits Division, 2002.

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49

E, Bottoms A., Gelsthorpe Loraine, Rex Sue, University of Cambridge. Institute of Criminology., and Cropwood Round-Table Conference (24th : 2000 : New Hall, University of Cambridge), eds. Community penalties: Change and challenges. Cullompton, Devon, UK: Willan Pub., 2001.

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50

Kouwe, Andre Van Der, and Jalal B. Andre. Motion Correction in MR: Correction of Position, Motion, and Dynamic Changes. Elsevier Science & Technology Books, 2021.

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