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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Women in jail: Perceptions of social support

Bussey, Janet Carole January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
2

Catch Chain

Talbert, Robert 28 January 2011 (has links)
Catch Chain is a book of poems that traces the journey of a Corrections Officer who attempts to combat issues of isolation, inhumane treatment of inmates and societal rejection in jails by embarking upon a cross-country road trip. However, the same issues the officer initially wrestled with begin cropping up in different cities, on various highways and in a multitude of states. The excitement and adventure of the open road runs parallel to the recurring imprisonment of the guard's mind. / Master of Fine Arts
3

A Look At Jail-based Reentry Programs

Weller, Mindy 01 January 2012 (has links)
Over the years correctional-based reentry programs have gained the attention of academics and government officials alike. Academic research has focused primarily on programs implemented in prisons and juvenile facilities. Reentry programs operating out of jails have been vastly under represented amongst these studies. This research study works towards closing this gap by examining jail-based reentry programs by observing the influences of age, race, gender, level of offence (misdemeanor/felony), and program completion on recidivism. Findings were measured for both those who participated but did not complete the programs and those who successfully completed the programs. Data from three jail-based reentry programs in Florida were first analyzed using a Chi-square test and then through binary logistic regression. Determining the strength of the relationships between the independent variables facilitated contextualization of the binary logistic regression results. The results of this research are discussed, and additional directions for future jail-based reentry research are presented.
4

Evaluation of an Opt-Out HIV Screening Program in the Maricopa County Jails

Nelson, Erin Da‐Hye 12 May 2017 (has links)
A Thesis submitted to The University of Arizona College of Medicine - Phoenix in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Medicine. / Since inmates are a population disproportionately affected by HIV, correctional settings are important sites for delivering HIV services. The Maricopa county (Phoenix Area) jail system is the 4th largest in the nation. In 2011, the Maricopa County Correctional Health Service implemented an opt‐out HIV screening program for individuals booked into the Maricopa County Jails (MCJ). The aims of this study were to determine for the years 2012‐2014: • The number of inmates screened for HIV • The HIV positivity rate • The number of newly diagnosed patients • The clinical characteristics of the newly diagnosed HIV positive patients Five to seven days after booking, inmates are offered HIV screening. These laboratory records were used to determine the number of inmates tested and positivity. Prior history of previous HIV diagnosis was obtained from Maricopa public health records. Retrospective chart review of the MCJ health and case management records, including Ryan White forms, was performed to gather gender, age, race/ethnicity, sexual orientation, drug use, homelessness and co‐morbidities of newly HIV‐infected persons, such as Hepatitis C and prior STDs. Categorical factors were compared between groups with the Chi‐square test. Means were compared using a standard t test. P values ≤0.05 were considered significant. A total of 319,575 persons were booked and 46,346 were screened (14.5%) for HIV during the study period. The majority of booked inmates were male (76.9%) and Caucasian (50.8%). The mean age of inmates was 36 years. There were 70 newly HIV‐diagnosed patients. Chi squared and t tests comparing newly diagnosed individuals to the general jail population revealed statistical significance for male gender (p=0.02), African American race (p=0.04), and age (p=0.003). Undiagnosed HIV, including AIDS (CD4 counts <200), is an important issue among individuals booked into the MCJ. Compared to the general jail population, HIV is more likely to be diagnosed in males rather than females, younger patients, and African‐American patients. Additionally, IV drug use, polysubstance abuse, other STDs (particularly syphilis), high risk sexual activity, Hepatitis C and homelessness were common among HIV positive patients. Surveillance should be continued and include more patient education on the importance of screening. Furthermore, targeting high‐risk populations may result in even greater numbers of individuals being diagnosed and treated. Within the next year, all patients at the MCJ will also be offered screening for Hepatitis C, chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis. This may also result in more patients agreeing to be screened, and subsequently diagnosed with HIV.
5

Fängelset i Kalmar : Från Kalmar slott till det nya fängelset 1852

Myrén, Martina January 2009 (has links)
<p>This essay considers the new prison in Kalmar, which was built 1852 and replaced the former prison in the castle of Kalmar. In the forts the conditions were awful and the interms lived together in large rooms. With the new reform that took place in Sweden, with the so-called Philadelphiasystem, the concept was to isolate the prisoner one by one in smaller rooms. The idea was to give them a religious ground so they could get themselves a self-reflection and a conscience. It was a new system for the personnel to control the internals and the order in prison.</p>
6

Fängelset i Kalmar : Från Kalmar slott till det nya fängelset 1852

Myrén, Martina January 2009 (has links)
This essay considers the new prison in Kalmar, which was built 1852 and replaced the former prison in the castle of Kalmar. In the forts the conditions were awful and the interms lived together in large rooms. With the new reform that took place in Sweden, with the so-called Philadelphiasystem, the concept was to isolate the prisoner one by one in smaller rooms. The idea was to give them a religious ground so they could get themselves a self-reflection and a conscience. It was a new system for the personnel to control the internals and the order in prison.
7

Les supports de l'écriture et de la communication en milieu carcéral / The supports of the writing and communication in prisons

Delugeard, Stephanie 23 September 2016 (has links)
D'un point de vue sémiotique, nous chercherons à analyser des productions de détenus résidant dans les prisons françaises afin de mettre en évidence les différences communicationnelles qui existent entre la société libre et ce milieu fermé. Pour cela, il nous faut comprendre le fonctionnement carcéral en tant que dispositif, que structure qui traite le corps comme un support de punition, même si la notion d'amendement est de plus en plus centrale dans le système judiciaire. Nous parcourrons les méthodes employées par certaines grandes écoles de communication afin d'améliorer les déficiences communicationnelles pour les confronter à la réalité carcérale.Nous verrons que les différences se trouvent principalement dans le choix et le détournement des supports de communication, ce qui est dû à des contraintes carcérales oppressantes, qui se manifestent dans les productions elles-mêmes. Toutes ces différences nous permettront d'élaborer un modèle d'écriture et de communication typiquement carcéral. / From a semiotic point of view, we shall try to analyze prisoners' productions living in the French prisons to highlight the communicational differences that exist between the free society and this closed environment. For that purpose, it is necessary to us to understand the prison functioning as device, as structure which treats the body as a support of punishment, even if the notion of amendment is more and more central in the judicial system. We shall look to the methods used by some schools of communication to improve the communicationaldeficiencies to confront them with the prison reality. We shall see that the differences are mainly in the choice and the misappropriation of communication supports, what is due to oppressive prison constraints, what shows itself in the very productions. All these differences will allow us to develop a typically prison model of writing andcommunication.
8

Correctional Career Pathways: A Jail Reentry Program Evaluation

Gass, Grace 01 December 2021 (has links)
There are numerous types of reentry programs available to inmates to help avoid the cycle of recidivism. There is little research on the impacts of reentry programs in jail populations. This current study sought to provide more research in this area by evaluating a local jail reentry program’s effect on recidivism. A quasi-experimental design was used to estimate the program’s effectiveness by comparing the recidivism statistics of inmates that have participated in the reentry program to a control group of inmates that did not. Inmates in the control group were matched according to their gender, age, race, and current offense type in efforts to mirror the type of inmates in the treatment group. Analyses indicated that inmates that completed the Correctional Career Pathways program had lower rates of recidivism when compared to the control group, but this difference was not great enough to be statistically significant.
9

Evaluation of Identifying Tuberculosis Infection and Disease in a Rural Institutionalized Population

Nduaguba, Patrick, Brannan, Grace, Shubrook, Jay 01 January 2010 (has links)
Context: Although the overall prevalence of tuberculosis (TB) in the United States is declining, correctional facilities continue to encounter a higher prevalence of this disease. Despite mandatory reporting laws for active TB, data for latent TB infection (LTBI) remains sketchy because reporting it is not required. Purpose: Investigation of the period prevalence of LTBI in a rural Ohio regional jail compared with other populations in the region to determine the need and adequacy of the screening program. Methods: Data collected on inmates was compared with data collected on hospital employees within the same geographic region. Findings: Between January 2006 and July 2007, staff at the jail tested 1274 inmates for TB using the Mantoux purified protein derivative (PPD) method. Ten inmates (6 in 2006 and 4 in 2007) tested positive. All 10 cases were followed with a negative chest radiograph, leading to the diagnosis of LTBI. The overall incidence for the jail for LTBI was 0.8%, with 0% active cases. However, 85 inmates (6.7% of the population) were released before a PPD interpretation could be completed. In the comparative population, 651 hospital employees were tested for TB. Of these, 32 employees tested positive (LTBI prevalence of 4.9%). There were no cases of active TB reported. Conclusion: The prevalence of LTBI in a rural jail (0.8%) is lower than the comparative sample population at a local hospital (4.9%). The rapid release of inmates (6.7%) indicates that TB data is incomplete and that potential cases of LTBI could have been unreported because of missed opportunity for interpretation of skin tests.
10

Archaeology of the Bruin Slave Jail

Kraus, Lisa Ann, 1975- 24 January 2011 (has links)
Archaeological and historical investigations of the Bruin Slave Jail in the West End of the City of Alexandria, Virginia, revealed a fascinating and complex history. From 1844 to 1861, the house belonged to Joseph Bruin, a slave trader, and housed the most successful and well-known slave trading operation in Alexandria. In 1848, Bruin purchased several slaves who were captured on board the schooner Pearl in one of the largest escapes ever attempted. Bruin and two of the Pearl refugees, Emily and Mary Edmondson, inspired some of the characters and events in Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin. Stowe included the true story of the Pearl refugees, and the Edmondson sisters in particular, in her comprehensive survey of the domestic slave trade, The Key to Uncle Tom’s Cabin. This study of the material culture and other archaeological data, along with extensive historical records regarding Joseph Bruin’s slave trading business and the stories of several slaves purchased by Bruin after the Pearl incident, illuminates the ways in which the internal slave trade changed the nature of slavery, and the ways slavery was contested by slaves and by abolitionist groups. It also demonstrates the ways in which African Americans were commodified in the slave markets. Analysis of the complementary historical and archaeological data reveals the ways these forces impacted the lives of enslaved women enmeshed in the slave trade particularly, and the ways they negotiated and resisted their sale by the slave traders who made their living buying and selling human beings in an increasingly corporate, and contested, political and sexual economy. / text

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