6,186 research outputs found
Supporting children's resettlement ('reentry') after custody : beyond the risk paradigm
In response to policy concerns in England and Wales and internationally, a considerable knowledge-base has identified factors statistically associated with reduced recidivism for children leaving custody. However, despite resulting guidance on how to support resettlement (âreentryâ), practice and outcomes remain disappointing. We argue that this failure reflects weaknesses in the dominant ârisk paradigmâ, which lacks a theory of change and undermines childrenâs agency. We conceptualise resettlement as a pro-social identity-shift. A new practice model reinterprets existing risk-based messages accordingly, and crucially adds principles to guide a childâs desistance journey. However, successful implementation may require the model to inform culture change more broadly across youth justice
Resettlement of young people leaving custody: Lessons from the literature update: July 2013
This paper is the first in a series of quarterly updates intended to outline the latest available lessons from research about resettlement of young offenders. It provides an overview of the relevant literature published in the period since Beyond Youth Custodyâs extensive review of the literature on the resettlement of young people from custody was published in April 2013.
It highlights that the number of children in custody has continued to fall. While clearly welcome, this presents challenges for the secure estate especially in terms of resettlement provision.
It outlines some of the proposed changes to the secure estate such as decommissioning of places in establishments, new healthcare standards and the governmentâs consultation around the intention to redesign the secure estate to put education at the heart of provision.
It summarises the findings of a recent small-scale qualitative study with girls in a YOI, highlighting key factors that encourage girls and young women to engage with resettlement services
Resettlement of young people leaving custody: Lessons from the literature
This literature review aims to set out the research and practice evidence about effective resettlement services for children and young adults and can be used to inform future policy and practice to ensure service delivery is evidence based. The findings of the review will help to steer the focus of Beyond Youth Custodyâs research over the duration of the programme and act as a baseline to assess how our understanding has advanced in terms of what works in facilitating the transition from youth custody to the community and beyond. In addition, the review highlights some examples of good practice, as well as the emerging key principles of effective resettlement provision
On quantization of nondispersive wave packets
Canonical commutation relations for the Bateman-Hillion type nondispersive
wave packets are constructedComment: LaTeX, 10 page
Non-perturbative solutions in the electro-weak theory with condensate and the -quark mass
We apply Bogoliubov compensation principle to the gauge electro-weak
interaction to demonstrate a spontaneous generation of anomalous three-boson
gauge invariant effective interaction. The non-trivial solution of compensation
equations uniquely defines the form-factor of the anomalous interaction and
parameters of the theory including value of gauge electro-weak coupling
in satisfactory agreement with its experimental value. A possibility
of spontaneous generation of effective four-fermion interaction of heavy quarks
is also demonstrated. This interaction defines an equation for a scalar bound
state of heavy quarks which serve as a substitute for the elementary scalar
Higgs doublet. As a result we calculate the -quark mass
in satisfactory agreement with the experimental value. The results strongly
support idea of condensate as a source of the electro-weak symmetry
breaking.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial overlap with
arXiv:1103.395
CDF Wjj anomaly as a non-perturbative effect of the electro-weak interaction
The recently reported CDF excess at in invariant mass
distribution of jet pairs accompanying -boson is tentatively interpreted as
a bound state of two decaying to quark-anti-quark pair. Non-perturbative
effects of EW interaction obtained by application of Bogoliubov compensation
approach lead to such bound state due to existence of anomalous three-boson
gauge-invariant effective interaction. The application of this scheme gives
satisfactory agreement with existing data without any adjusting parameter but
the bound state mass .Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Resettlement: Lessons from the literature update November 2014
This review outlines the latest lessons from research, policy and practice in the resettlement of young offenders. It provides an overview of relevant literature and developments in the filed of youth justice since Beyond Youth Custodyâs last update in August 2014.
â˘It updates on the latest from the governmentâs âTransforming Youth Custodyâ agenda, around changes to the custodial estate including the decommissioning of custodial places and highlights possible implications these changes have for the resettlement of young people.
â˘It outlines developments in resettlement practice and interventions from both a UK and international context including mental health support, sports interventions, mentoring and post-custody drug-related interventions.
â˘It illuminates the findings of recent research into the experiences of bereavement among young men in custody exploring how the prison context impacts on young people who have experienced recent bereavement
Resettlement of young people leaving resettlement:Lessons from the literature update: October 2013
This paper is the second in a series of quarterly updates intended to outline the latest available lessons from research about resettlement of young offenders. It provides an overview of the relevant literature published in the period since Beyond Youth Custodyâs first update of the literature that was published in July 2013.
It highlights that the number of children and young adults in custody has continued to fall. Such falls are welcome but also have implications for resettlement services since the residual incarcerated population is likely to have more entrenched offending behaviour and higher concentration of problems.
It outlines some of the proposed changes to the secure estate including the provisions of the Offender Rehabilitation Bill and how they will affect young people in different ways.
It identifies that while there is an increasing understanding of the general principles that underlie effective resettlement work, there is less concrete evidence of the impact of particular interventions, especially where these are delivered by non-statutory partner
Resettlement of young people leaving resettlement: Lessons from the literature update: August 2014
This paper is the latest in a series of regular updates intended to outline the latest available lessons from research about resettlement of young offenders. It provides an overview of the relevant literature published in the period since Beyond Youth Custodyâs last update that was published in March 2013.
â˘It highlights that the number of children and young adults in custody has continued to fall. Such falls are welcome but also have implications for resettlement services since the residual incarcerated population is likely to have more entrenched offending behaviour and higher concentration of problems.
â˘It outlines developments of the proposed changes to the custodial estate.
â˘It considers published reports from the Ministry of Justiceâs Data Lab and their analysis of individual organisationsâ impact on reoffending.
â˘From an international perspective it considers the evaluation of different programmes of community-based re-entry programmes for prisoners leaving custody
Exact Inverse Scattering Theory
The concepts of reference wave slowness (reciprocal of velocity) and an associated free reference space Green\u27s function slowness spectrum are introduced. A modified Kirchoff surface integral, containing only the imaginary part of this free reference space Green\u27s function slowness spectrum, is formulated, yielding an integral equation for the unknown fields and sources in the interior of a closed surface on which the (remotely sensed) fields are known. A well-posed, analytic closed form solution of this integral equation is obtained
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