In this section
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Practice: The New Zealand Corrections Journal
- Volume 8 Issue 1: June 2021
- Volume 7 Issue 1: July 2019
- Volume 6 Issue 2: November 2018
- Volume 6 Issue 1: July 2018
- Volume 5 Issue 2: November 2017
- Volume 5 Issue 1: July 2017
- Information for contributors
- Volume 4 Issue 2: December 2016
- Volume 4 Issue 1: August 2016
- Volume 3 Issue 2: December 2015 - Evidence based practice
- Volume 3 Issue 1: April 2015 - Desistance
- Volume 2 Issue 3: December 2014 - Collaboration and Partnerships
- Volume 2 Issue 2: August 2014 - Motivational Interviewing
- Volume 2 Issue 1: April 2014
- Volume 1 Issue 2: November 2013 - Youth
- Volume 1 Issue 1: May 2013
- Tai Aroha Evaluation 2015
- Comorbid substance use disorders and mental health disorders among New Zealand prisoners
- Women's Experiences of Re-offending and Rehabilitation
- Topic Series Reports
- Formative Evaluation of the Mothers with Babies Units
- What Works for Maori
- Community Based Domestic Violence 2012
- Tai Aroha 2012
- Breaking the Cycle of Crime
- Youth Therapeutic Programmes
- Prisoner double-bunking: Perceptions and impacts (2012)
- Community Sentence Patterns in New Zealand
- Benchmarking Study of Home Detention Programs in Australia and New Zealand
- About Time: Turning people away from a life of crime and reducing re-offending
- Reconviction Rates of Sex Offenders: Five year follow-up study
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Risk assessment of recidivism of violent sexual female offenders
- Introduction
- Policies, guidelines and current practices
- A profile of violent and sexual female offenders
- Female offenders
- Risk, need and responsivity
- Risk factors for (repeated) criminal behaviour
- Risk factors for violent re-offending
- Psychopathy and female offenders
- Risk factors and sexual re-offending
- Criminogenic needs
- Responsivity issues
- Recommendations and guidelines
- Reference-list
- Appendices
- What works now
- Reconviction Patterns of offenders managed in the community: A 60-months follow-up analysis
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Reconviction patterns of released prisoners: A 48-months follow-up analysis
- Introduction
- Overall recidivism rates (48-month follow-up)
- Re-imprisonment rates by age at release
- Re-imprisonment rates by age at first imprisonment
- Re-imprisonment rates by ethnicity
- Re-imprisonment rates by original offence type
- Reimprisonment rates by new offence type
- Frequency of re-imprisonments (48-month follow-up)
- Re-imprisonment rates by number of previous sentences
- Re-imprisonment rates: "first-timers" and "recidivists"
- Summary
- Appendix 1
- Appendix 2: Counts of offenders in each sub-group
- Reconviction patterns of released prisoners: A 60-months follow-up analysis
- Maori Offenders and Home Detention: Analysis of a One-Year Cohort
- Reconviction patterns of offenders managed in the community: A 48-months follow-up analysis
- Over-representation of Maori in the criminal justice system
- Reconviction Patterns of Released Prisoners: A 36-months Follow-up Analysis
- And there was light...
- Best use of Psychological Service treatment resources
- Census of Prison Inmates and Home Detainees
- Child Sex Offender Treatment
- Criminogenic Needs Inventory (CNI)
- Inmate Family Relocation Study
- National Study of Psychiatric Morbidity in NZ Prisons
- New Zealand high-risk offenders
- Prison Youth Vulnerability Scale
- Risk of Reconviction
- Storm Warning
- Te Whakakotahitanga - An Evaluation of the Te Piriti Special Treatment Programme
- The Driving Offender Treatment Scale
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The Effectiveness of Correctional Treatment
- Just How Effective Is Correctional Treatment At Reducing Re-Offending?
- Historical Background: The "What Works?" Debate
- Reviews of Offender Rehabilitation
- New Zealand Correctional Programming
- 1. Psychological Service treatment evaluation studies
- 2. The Kia Marama sex offender treatment programme
- 3. The Montgomery House violence prevention programme
- 4. The Driving Offender Treatment (DOT) programme
- 5. The Te Piriti sex offender treatment programme
- 6. Straight Thinking
- Conclusions
- Summary
- References
- The Utility of the Psychopathy Checklist - Screening Version for Predicting Serious Violent Recidivism in a New Zealand Offender Sample
- When the Bough Breaks
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A Risk-Need Profile Using Four Measures for Youth Offenders Incarcerated in Young Offender Units
- Executive Summary
- Introduction
- Method
- Results
- Discussion and Recommendations
- References
- Appendix A: Study Risk Measures
- Appendix B: Participants Information and Consent Form
- Appendix C: Distribution of index offending by YOU
- Appendix D: Distribution of risk categories for all four risk Measures
- Appendix E: Distribution of YLS/CMI subscale scores
- Māori Focus Units and Māori Therapeutic
Research
Read research undertaken by Corrections.
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15 September 2008
Reconviction patterns of released prisoners: A 60-months follow-up analysis - View Reconviction patterns of released prisoners: A 60-months follow-up analysis PDF 174.7 KB
Reconviction patterns of released prisoners: A 60-monith follow-up analysis.
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13 June 2008
Maori Offenders and Home Detention: Analysis of a One-Year Cohort
Study examining ethnicity-based differences in offenders obtaining Leave to Apply for Home Detention.
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13 June 2008
Reconviction patterns of offenders managed in the community: A 48-months follow-up analysis - View Reconviction patterns of offenders managed in the community: A 48-months follow-up analysis PDF 73.3 KB
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13 May 2008
Over-representation of Maori in the criminal justice system - View Over-representation of Maori in the criminal justice system PDF 475.3 KB
Over-representation of Maori in the criminal justice system
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27 May 2007
Reconviction Patterns of Released Prisoners: A 36-months Follow-up Analysis - View Reconviction Patterns of Released Prisoners: A 36-months Follow-up Analysis PDF 144.2 KB
Reconviction Patterns of Released Prisoners: A 36-months Follow-up Analysis
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13 April 2007
And there was light... - View And there was light... PDF 281.2 KB
Evaluating the Kia Marama Treatment Programme for New Zealand Sex Offenders Against Children
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13 April 2007
Best use of Psychological Service treatment resources
Best use of Psychological Service treatment resources
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13 April 2007
Census of Prison Inmates and Home Detainees
The census provides a snapshot of the inmate population, which assists the Department in the analysis of how best to respond to offenders' needs and reduce re-offending
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13 April 2007
Child Sex Offender Treatment
Information on Child Sex Offender Treatment
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13 April 2007
Criminogenic Needs Inventory (CNI)
The Criminogenic Needs Inventory (CNI) has been developed to complement the Risk of reConviction (RoC) models by identifying why offenders are at risk
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