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Reconciling What Works and Broken Windows: The Policy Relevance of Individual and Social Correlates to Recidivism Reduction

NCJ Number
232546
Journal
Victims & Offenders Volume: 4 Issue: 4 Dated: October 2009 Pages: 427-434
Author(s)
Mario A. Paparozzi; Melinda D. Schlager
Date Published
October 2009
Length
8 pages
Annotation
This article examines community corrections.
Abstract
Scholars and practitioners have devoted considerable attention to affirming offender rehabilitation ("what works") and also arguing for the need to foster healthy social contexts in order to reduce recidivism ("broken windows"). It makes sense, therefore, to acknowledge the critical importance of both individual and social correlates of criminal behavior and to reconcile "what works" with "broken windows." It is argued that the most serious policy issues facing community corrections have more to do with problems associated with organizational capital than with the state of knowledge about specific correctional paradigms. (Published Abstract)