1,478 research outputs found
Policing people with sexual convictions using strengths-based approaches
Purpose – Effective risk management planning ought to include strategies that help control and mitigate risk, as well as develop and strengthen client’s protective factors. The active risk management system (ARMS) is a structured risk assessment and management planning tool designed to assess both dynamic factors known to be related to sexual recidivism, along with protective factors that might support the desistance process. The tool was recently implemented across all police forces in England and Wales. The purpose of this paper is to examine police practitioner’s experience of the tool, their attitudes towards risk assessment, risk management planning, interviewing clients for the assessment and their perspective on strengths-based approaches in general.
Design/methodology/approach – A mixed method approach is adopted including one attitudinal measure: community attitudes towards sexual offender-revised (CATSO-R); and four focus groups, analysed using interpretive phenomenological analysis (IPA).
Findings – CATSO-R results indicate that when compared to other populations, police officers appear to perceive sex offenders as dangerous, requiring severe punishment. These findings are supported in the IPA analysis where three themes highlight the following: principles and practices of the ARMS tool are incongruent with traditional policing; the negative values officers hold conflicts with a role that supports a process of reintegration and Training and supervision is insufficient to equip management of sexual offenders and violent offender’s with the skills and knowledge needed.
Originality/value – Only one study exists in which ARMS training and its pilot test were examined, this is the first empirical examination of its application in practice. Findings are therefore, of relevance to practitioners and academics alike
Faith-Based Intervention: Prison, Prayer, and Perseverance
This qualitative article explores the impact of faith-based interventions through the lens of a self-identified practicing Christian: Joanna. For over a decade, Joanna has visited several prisons in the United Kingdom in a faith-based capacity: supporting prisoners, families, and prison chaplaincies. Joanna professes the role of faith and religiosity to be a positive and influential component in the lives of those imprisoned. This paper explores Joanna’s journey of supporting individuals within the prison walls, reflecting on the impact of labels, imprisonment, faith-based intervention, and religiosity. Much of the current research pertaining to faith-based interventions are limited; therefore, the experiences of those who volunteer within prisons in a faith-based capacity is often overlooked. Yet, faith-based intervention and religiosity within a criminal justice context provides several benefits which impact on those in prison, their families, and people working within a prison environment
Outliers from the Mass--Metallicity Relation II: A Sample of Massive Metal-Poor Galaxies from SDSS
We present a sample of 42 high-mass low-metallicity outliers from the
mass--metallicity relation of star-forming galaxies. These galaxies have
stellar masses that span log(M_*/M_sun) ~9.4 to 11.1 and are offset from the
mass--metallicity relation by -0.3 to -0.85 dex in 12+log(O/H). In general,
they are extremely blue, have high star formation rates for their masses, and
are morphologically disturbed. Tidal interactions are expected to induce
large-scale gas inflow to the galaxies' central regions, and we find that these
galaxies' gas-phase oxygen abundances are consistent with large quantities of
low-metallicity gas from large galactocentric radii diluting the central
metal-rich gas. We conclude with implications for deducing gas-phase
metallicities of individual galaxies based solely on their luminosities,
specifically in the case of long gamma-ray burst host galaxies.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 11 pages, 11 figure
Gas-Phase Oxygen Gradients in Strongly Interacting Galaxies: I. Early-Stage Interactions
A consensus is emerging that interacting galaxies show depressed nuclear gas
metallicities compared to isolated star-forming galaxies. Simulations suggest
that this nuclear underabundance is caused by interaction-induced inflow of
metal-poor gas, and that this inflow concurrently flattens the radial
metallicity gradients in strongly interacting galaxies. We present
metallicities of over 300 HII regions in a sample of 16 spirals that are
members of strongly interacting galaxy pairs with mass ratio near unity. The
deprojected radial gradients in these galaxies are about half of those in a
control sample of isolated, late-type spirals. Detailed comparison of the
gradients with simulations show remarkable agreement in gradient distributions,
the relationship between gradients and nuclear underabundances, and the shape
of profile deviations from a straight line. Taken together, this evidence
conclusively demonstrates that strongly interacting galaxies at the present day
undergo nuclear metal dilution due to gas inflow, as well as significant
flattening of their gas-phase metallicity gradients, and that current
simulations can robustly reproduce this behavior at a statistical level.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
The development of the active risk management system
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to detail the development and implementation process of a risk management tool that includes the assessment of static and dynamic factors, as well as factors that are both risk related and protective.
Design/methodology/approach – Active Risk Assessment System (ARMS) is a tool used to help criminal justice practitioners as they work to support the safe reintegration of those with sexual convictions back into the community.
Findings – The tool was developed for use by the police, probation and prison services across England and Wales and this paper outlines the following: the process adopted by the development team in designing the tool, the theoretical principles considered and adopted by the team, and a summary of the early evaluation and recommendations made.
Originality/value – This paper includes some further recommendations for both the developers of the tool and for the police service in England and Wales
Examining the role of faith community groups with sexual offenders: A systematic review
The aim of this paper is to examine the role of faith-based communities and activities in helping those convicted of sexual offending to desist from crime and reintegrate back into their communities. It was found that much of the current research is limited to non-offending juvenile populations. Where research has been carried out on adult offenders, these tend to be custodial cases and exclude those convicted of sexual offending. The role of religious and spiritual groups in helping people convicted of sexual offending to desist from crime, while reintegrating into the community is, therefore, unknown. A number of parallels between the factors needed to promote desistance from sexual offending and the conditions encountered when engaged with a faith community are outlined. We would note that a religious and spiritual environment can: promote motivation to change, provide access to pro-social peers, offer moral guidance, provide a support network, and help bring meaning into people's lives. The potential for people to use faith-based communities or organizations to facilitate offending are also considered. Finally, implications for probation work and future research are also discussed
An Integral Field Study of Abundance Gradients in Nearby LIRGs
We present for the first time metallicity maps generated using data from the
Wide Field Spectrograph (WiFeS) on the ANU 2.3m of 9 Luminous Infrared Galaxies
(LIRGs) and discuss the abundance gradients and distribution of metals in these
systems. We have carried out optical integral field spectroscopy (IFS) of
several several LIRGs in various merger phases to investigate the merger
process. In a major merger of two spiral galaxies with preexisting disk
abundance gradients, the changing distribution of metals can be used as a
tracer of gas flows in the merging system as low metallicity gas is transported
from the outskirts of each galaxy to their nuclei. We employ this fact to probe
merger properties by using the emission lines in our IFS data to calculate the
gas-phase metallicity in each system. We create abundance maps and subsequently
derive a metallicity gradient from each map. We compare our measured gradients
to merger stage as well as several possible tracers of merger progress and
observed nuclear abundances. We discuss our work in the context of previous
abundance gradient observations and compare our results to new galaxy merger
models which trace metallicity gradient. Our results agree with the observed
flattening of metallicity gradients as a merger progresses. We compare our
results with new theoretical predictions that include chemical enrichment. Our
data show remarkable agreement with these simulations.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 26 pages, 18 figure
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