Public Safety, Public Spending: Forecasting America’s Prison Population, 2007-2011 Adam Gelb, Project Director
Public Safety Performance Project
The Pew Charitable Trusts, Pew Center on the States
October 2, 2007
A Comparative Analysis of Prevention and Delinquencybrighteyes
A Comparative Analysis of Prevention and Delinquency - Authors Mary Magee Quinn and Jeffrey Poirier, American Institutes for Research, National Center on Education, Disability,and Juvenile Justice (EDJJ)
Health Care Continuity in Jail, Prison and Community brighteyes
Health Care Continuity in Jail, Prison and Community Thomas.Lincoln@bhs.org
Hampden County Correctional Center Baystate Brightwood Health Center Springfield, MA 2006
Single Payer Systems: Equity in Access to Caresoder145
Presentation by Lynn Blewett at "The True Workings of Single Payer Systems: Lessons or Warnings for U.S. Reform' conference sponsored by the Journal of Health Politics Policy and Law, May 10 2008.
A Comparative Analysis of Prevention and Delinquencybrighteyes
A Comparative Analysis of Prevention and Delinquency - Authors Mary Magee Quinn and Jeffrey Poirier, American Institutes for Research, National Center on Education, Disability,and Juvenile Justice (EDJJ)
Health Care Continuity in Jail, Prison and Community brighteyes
Health Care Continuity in Jail, Prison and Community Thomas.Lincoln@bhs.org
Hampden County Correctional Center Baystate Brightwood Health Center Springfield, MA 2006
Single Payer Systems: Equity in Access to Caresoder145
Presentation by Lynn Blewett at "The True Workings of Single Payer Systems: Lessons or Warnings for U.S. Reform' conference sponsored by the Journal of Health Politics Policy and Law, May 10 2008.
National Health Care Reform: The Proposals and the Politicssoder145
Presentation by Elizabeth Lukanen at the University of Minnesota Academic Health Center's Student Leadership Summit in Minneapolis, MN, December 5, 2009.
Tackling the Tough Topics: The public plan option, employer pay or play, and ...soder145
Presentation by Jean Abraham of the University of Minnesota at the Minnesota Senate Health and Human Services Budget Division hearing in St. Paul, MN, August 18 2009.
The National HIV Prevention Inventory provides the first, comprehensive inventory of HIV prevention efforts at the state and local levels in the United States. Based on a survey of 65 health departments, including all state and territorial jurisdictions and six U.S. cities, the Inventory is intended to offer a baseline picture of how HIV prevention is delivered across the country in an effort to provide policymakers, public health officials, community organizations, and others with a more in depth understanding of HIV prevention and the role played by health departments in its delivery.
National Health Care Reform: The Proposals and the Politicssoder145
Presentation by Elizabeth Lukanen at the University of Minnesota Academic Health Center's Student Leadership Summit in Minneapolis, MN, December 5, 2009.
Tackling the Tough Topics: The public plan option, employer pay or play, and ...soder145
Presentation by Jean Abraham of the University of Minnesota at the Minnesota Senate Health and Human Services Budget Division hearing in St. Paul, MN, August 18 2009.
The National HIV Prevention Inventory provides the first, comprehensive inventory of HIV prevention efforts at the state and local levels in the United States. Based on a survey of 65 health departments, including all state and territorial jurisdictions and six U.S. cities, the Inventory is intended to offer a baseline picture of how HIV prevention is delivered across the country in an effort to provide policymakers, public health officials, community organizations, and others with a more in depth understanding of HIV prevention and the role played by health departments in its delivery.
Report Objectives
1. To estimate the future size and cost of state and federal prison systems
2. To examine the reasons for projected growth
3. To highlight state efforts to control corrections spending
4. To outline the challenges ahead for state policy makers
http://www.inmatecountyjail.com
Thinking Outside the Cell: Solutions for Public Safety, Victims, and Taxpayersmrmarclv
This presentation to lawmakers from across the nation highlights the growing evidence and public consensus supporting alternatives to incarceration that enhance public safety, empower and restore victims, and reduce the burden on taxpayers.
Thinking Outside the Cell: Solutions for Public Safety, Victims, and Taxpayersmrmarclv
This presentation to lawmakers from across the nation highlights the growing evidence and public consensus supporting alternatives to incarceration that enhance public safety, empower and restore victims, and reduce the burden on taxpayers.
Current imprisonment rates, future forecasts and security issuesPaul Colbert
Current imprisonment rates, future forecasts and security issues – Implications for Australian Prison Systems
- Meanings of security
- Current trends in crime and imprisonment
- Prospects of reversing the expansion of imprisonment
- Performance indicators related to security
- Terrorism and terrorist trials and their effect on prison regimes
http://www.inmatecountyjail.com
Reducing the Cost without Compromising SafetyDavid Martin
For the corrections agency executive, effectively addressing this question will be the number one objective for the balance of this decade, and likely beyond.
Sonoma county - Public Safety RealignmentPaul Colbert
Why Realignment?
- Coleman/Plata –prison overcrowding lawsuit
- State budget
- Recidivism rate from CDCR
- Research
Realignment does not result in early release of any currently sentenced felons. Realignment does not transfer custody of any prisoner from State Prison directly to County Jail. Rather, it changes jurisdiction of specified populations from state to local control, by changing sentencing and supervision requirements
By Chief Probation Officers of California
http://www.inmatecountyjail.com
Concept Paper
MHA 618
Date
Instructor Name
Running head: CONCEPT PAPER
1
CONCEPT PAPER
8
Concept Paper
As a result of the unstable social set up and spread of public knowledge of matters of sex, there have been changes in the legal aspect of the crime. Particularly, the changes touch on the rules of evidence and procedures, policing techniques as a result of technology, investigations exercises as well as prosecution of the victims. Besides, the term sex crime has been legally broadened to encompass the ordinary crimes such rape and molestation of children as well as the distribution of child pornography, lewd act with a child, and penetration of the genital or anal region on a foreign object as observed by Brownmiller (2015). As such, the expansiveness of the term increases the probability of the juvenile cases on sexual-based crimes. Indeed, the exposure to pornographic content online aggravates the rates of committing these crimes among people aged between 10-17 years (Burke, 2012).
To counter the rate of re-offence among those treated with for sexually based crimes; the study will present a feasible analysis of an expansion service projected to provide Mental Health Services for the youths within the Juvenile Justice System on sex crime accounts. Besides, these services are limited due to insufficient facilities and high charges. Thus, the study will test the essence of having Tele-psychiatry as a way to support the youth within the first 12 months of release. The report will conduct a feasibility study on the expansion project using such indicator as the market, finance, operation of the inpatient and outpatient as well as analyzing the facility and services outlook. Finally, it will make a decision based on the findings of the feasibility analysis.
Evaluating Feasibility
The section will entail analysis of such factors as the human resources, community needs, and technological advances, federal and state regulatory issues to make a valid case for the expansion project. The ensuing discussion presents the information required to test for feasibility of the Mental Health Service Facility. The analysis will be based on the SWOT analysis illustrated below.
S.W.O.T Analysis
Strengths: The strengths for the Mental Health Service Facility would be skilled human resources. Finance there will be an increment in expense due to the maintenance costs of the facility and the various fees paid on annual basis. However, the construction expense is fixed while the maintenance cost for salaried workers is variable costs.
Weaknesses: The weaknesses are the high cost of implementing the program. Making sure that patients adhere to the program provided to them.
Opportunities: Technology and incremental revenue opportunities. There would be an induced demand skilled human resources. There could be a high cost for new policies and technology for telepsychology. Thereby, providing the facility will qualify staff will fill the already e.
Our Future and the End of the Oil Age: Building Resilience in a Resource-Cons...brighteyes
Our Future and the End of the Oil Age: Building Resilience in a Resource-Constrained World
by Dmitry Orlov
March 25, 2010
Bristol Community College
University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth
Marketing to the Islamic World Mustafa M. Farouk Federation of Islamic Associations of New Zealand Presentation to the International Marketing Class MARK 302 School of Marketing & International Business, Victoria University of Wellington, October 6, 2006
ISLAMIC BANKING AND FINANCE: MALAYSIA’S EXPERIENCE AND ACHIEVEMENTSbrighteyes
ISLAMIC BANKING AND FINANCE: MALAYSIA’S EXPERIENCE AND ACHIEVEMENTS 13 June 2006
Victoria University of Wellington
Presented by:
Bakarudin Ishak
Director
Islamic Banking and Takaful Department Bank Negara Malaysia
ISLAMIC BANKING AND FINANCE: WHAT’S IN IT FOR CANADIAN COMPANIES?
Mohammad Fadel
Canada Research Chair in the Law and Economics of Islamic Law University of Toronto Faculty of Law October 16, 2006
Public Safety, Public Spending: Forecasting America’s Prison Population, 2007-2011
1. Public Safety, Public Spending: F orecasting America’s Prison Population, 2007-2011 Adam Gelb, Project Director Public Safety Performance Project The Pew Charitable Trusts, Pew Center on the States October 2, 2007
21. Public Safety, Public Spending: F orecasting America’s Prison Population, 2007-2011 Adam Gelb, Project Director Public Safety Performance Project The Pew Charitable Trusts, Pew Center on the States October 2, 2007