Preventing Crime Will Be More Effective Than Rehabilitation
Pennsylvania
Preventing Crime May Be
More Effective Than
Rehabilitation
This paper reviews Pennsylvania policymakers approach to crime. In particular the researcher explores the idea that it is better to prevent crime than merely rehabilitate criminals. Once released, most criminals return to a life of crime. Recent research in Pennsylvania State however, reveals that crime may be prevented if rehabilitative measures begin at the juvenile level. If at-risk youths are identified at an early age, there is a greater chance that they can be rehabilitated to become contributing members of society rather than criminals engaged in an endless cycle of violent criminal activity.
Introduction
There are few things that make a difference in one's life than the values and morals one learns as a child. Self-sufficiency is something that is taught, not necessarily something a child instinctually learns when they are born. Criminal behavior is a learned process, much like self-sufficient. Many policymakers believe that self-sufficiency may be the key to solving crime, much more so than the tough love approach policymakers of the past have. This is not however, the case for everyone. Joelle Farrell (2011) argues in the Philadelphia Inquirer that Pennsylvania policymakers are discovering "get tough on crime" sentencing causes recidivism and increases cost, and so corrections should focus on support systems, which have been shown to save money and keep convicts from returning to prison in many cases. Is support enough however, to reduce crime, or even eliminate it? Statistics suggest discovering the causes for crime will reduce crime rates far more that getting tough, and result in even greater net benefits than trying to reintegrate criminals into society after following rehabilitative measures. This paper will discuss the net benefits of a self-sufficiency program that rehabilitates juveniles so they stop criminal behaviors before they have a chance to become criminals at all.
Why is discovering...
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