On September 14, 2010, CJCJ staff visited the O.H. Close and N.A. Chaderjian Youth Correctional Facilities operated by CDCR’s Division of Juvenile Facilities. Our party of six was accompanied through the facilities by over fifteen DJF staff members comprising all levels of DJF personnel. This presented us with a unique opportunity to examine DJF’s progress in providing rehabilitative treatment and care at various levels of the institutional system. We are deeply grateful for the opportunity…
Publications Oct 1, 2010
What is Lobbying?
What is Lobbying?
Publications Oct 1, 2010
No Violence Alliance (NoVA) Project: San Francisco’s Model Adult Case Management Reentry Program
No Violence Alliance (NoVA) Project: San Francisco’s Model Adult Case Management Reentry Program
Publications Oct 1, 2010
Marijuana Arrests and California’s Drug War: A Report to the California Legislature, 2010 Update
Marijuana Arrests and California’s Drug War: A Report to the California Legislature, 2010 Update
Publications Oct 1, 2010
AN UPDATE: Closing California’s Division of Juvenile Facilities: An Analysis of County Institutional Capacity
AN UPDATE: Closing California’s Division of Juvenile Facilities: An Analysis of County Institutional Capacity
Ananish Chaudhuri: Throw three ‘strikes’ out of the ballpark New Zealand Herald, September 30, 2010.
Blog Sep 27, 2010
Dropping Out and Imprisonment
In a previous blog I discussed the relationship between dropping out and crime among juveniles. In this blog I noted that that compared to high school graduates dropouts “earn lower wages, pay fewer taxes, are more likely to commit crimes, are less likely to be employed, are more likely to be on welfare, and are less healthy.” “” On my web site I expanded on this by exploring what the Children’s Defense Fund has called the prison pipeline or the connection between the…
Sep 26, 2010
San Francisco nonprofits under the microscope
San Francisco nonprofits under the microscope The San Francisco Examiner, September 25, 2010.
The latest figures from the Bureau of Justice Statistics show that drug and immigration offenses constitute a large proportion of the cases processed in the criminal justice system, along with a rising number of immigration cases. Starting with the latest numbers from the series ” Felony Defendants in Large Urban Counties, 2006 ” we find that between 1994 and 2006 drug cases constituted the largest proportion of felony cases, ranging from 34% to 37%. During the same period the proportion…
(ISSN 1530 – 3012) From the editor Parolee Day Treatment in California: Action Research with Parolees in an Urban Setting Life After ‘Life’: Wrongly Convicted But Never Truly Free Juvenile Sexual Offenders: An analytical View of Effective Programming Jail Wall Drawings and the Role of Artistic Creativity in Community Reintegration A Convict Criminology Perspective on Women Guarding Men From the editor By Elizabeth Brown, Ph.D. and Randall G. Shelden, M.A., Ph.D. From The…
Sep 10, 2010
The Myth of Immigrant-Fueled Crime Wave in Arizona
The Myth of Immigrant-Fueled Crime Wave in Arizona Politics Blog, September 9, 2010
Blog Sep 4, 2010
Racial Bias and Certification
A story from the Chicago Reporter is merely the most recent of a long line of studies going back 30 years documenting the racial bias of the certification process. Certifying juveniles as adults was part of an overall conservative “law and order” crackdown on juvenile crime starting during the Reagan administration in the 1980s. Research began almost immediately during that time documenting the disproportionate number of African-American youth who were certified. As the studies poured…