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Friday, January 18, 2008

On a clear day you can see forever: integrating values and skills in sex offender treatment - Tony Ward

The topic of sex offender rehabilitation frequenty evokes fierce reactions, ranging from strident demands for harsher sentences contrasted with calls for more imaginative and compassionate sentencing options. There seems to be a polarization of positions centered on the question of offenders' moral standing: are they moral strangers or fellow travellers? This fundamental disagreement about offenders' moral status is at the core of a number of independent, although related current practice and research issues confronting the field, namely: (1) risk management versus strength-based treatment approaches; (2) the utility of utilizing individually tailored versus manual-based programmes for offenders; (3) focusing on the technical aspects or therapy as opposed to relationship and therapist factors (what has been called process issues); and (4) the conflict between protecting the community versus promoting the interests of offenders. In this paper I suggest that an approach to sex offender treatment based on a combination of human rights theory (an ethical researce) and strengths-based approaches can help us navigate our way through the above dilemmas in a way that addressess both the needs of offenders and those of the community.
From: Journal of Sexual Aggression, Vol. 13 no. 3 (2007)

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