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The Importance Of Recidivism In The Criminal Justice System

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In years past, law enforcement and the criminal justice system have witnessed a paradigm shift in the expectations of the correctional system. Prior to modern societies innovative patterns of thinking, the general expectation of the correctional system was to either punish the offenders with confinement or rehabilitate the offenders from their criminally deviant ways. Unfortunately, the lack of effectiveness in the rehabilitation process and the high rate of recidivism has brought more attention to reform needed for the criminal justice system and corrections, more specifically. Society has come to expect that corrections be modeled around a rehabilitation-driven environment in order to successfully prevent offenders from re-offending. The whole view of “get tough on crime” led many people to have higher than normal expectations of the corrections system which would decisively create a model of jailing offenders for crimes they committed without looking at sociocultural factors surrounding their reasoning for criminally deviant behavior (Carlson & Garrett, 2008). This stance has led to overcrowding in jails and prisons, which has created apprehension among judges to sentence offenders to jail for their crimes. Because of this, the next expectation of the public will, theoretically, for the corrections system to create some type of reform centered around preventing recidivism and placing less emphasis on the actual punishment of crime sentencing. The author opines that correctional institutions and systems will evolve to meet the changing litigiousness among younger members of society that will likely be incarcerated in the years to come. Not only that, but also will begin to reform to be more “politically correct” in order to not offend members of society that have expressed disagreement with the treatment of offenders. External factors, such as society, are not the only attributable causes of reform in the corrections system. There are also internal factors as well. Premier research and increased attention in recent years to establishing what is considered an ideal correctional model has allowed for agencies to create consultation services for institutions housing offenders. Especially of note is the

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