Exploring the application, theory, implications and socio-legal underpinnings of human rights in probation and associated offender management, this book examines the organisation and re-organization of the National Probation Service, from the introduction of the Human Rights Act (HRA) to the end of the Transforming Rehabilitation era.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
PART I: INTRODUCTION
1. Purposes and Rationale
2. The Terminology of Human Rights in Probation
PART II: HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS
3. The Human Rights Act 1998 and Probation
4. Human Rights in the Era of Cumulative Failures
PART III: PROBATION IMPERATIVES AND HUMAN RIGHTS
5. Risk: An Ally or a Foe?
6. Rehabilitation: Fitting the Mould
7. Supervision as Public Protection? Human Rights Respond
PART IV: CHALLENGES AND BALANCES
8. Multi-Agency Work: Human Rights in the Balance
9. Relationships and Human Rights: A Fateful Encounter
10. Victims and Probation: Rebalancing the Human Rights Scales
PART V: CONCLUSION
11. Summary and Recommendations