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Community Participation in Social Defence

NCJ Number
99436
Author(s)
M D Mir
Date Published
1983
Length
9 pages
Annotation
The author outlines a scheme whereby private citizens in India can, through participation in voluntary agencies, help ex-offenders return to society and consequently help curb increasing crime rates.
Abstract
Treatment methods designed to reform prisoners cannot achieve the desired results unless offenders are assisted, the desired results unless offenders are assisted, guided, and supervised on their release from penal institutions. Community-based voluntary agencies can render a valuable service to the social and vocational rehabilitation of offenders through prisoners' aid societies, borstal associations, aftercare homes, rescue shelters, and sheltered vocational workshops. Such agencies have been established in almost every developed and developing country. In India, many states have committees to help prisoners on their release. Such aftercare programs bridge the gap between the restricted environment of institutional custody to resocialization in the community. Objectives of aftercare services as outlined in the Model Prison Manual are listed. The article includes 28 references.

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