ABSTRACT

This book queries the concept of rehabilitation to determine how, on a legislative and policy level, the term is defined as a goal of correctional systems. The book explores what rehabilitation is by investigating how, at different moments in time, its conceptualization has shaped, and been shaped by, shifting norms, practices, and institutions of corrections in California. The author calls for a rethinking of theoretical understandings of the corrections system, generally, and parole system, specifically, and calls for an expansion in the questions asked in reintegration studies. The book is designed for scholars seeking to better understand the relationship between correctional systems and rehabilitation and the full scope of rehabilitation as a legislative goal, and is also suitable for use as teaching tool for historical, textual, and interviewing methods.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|6 pages

Building a Parole Bureaucracy

Inception to 1930s

chapter 2|24 pages

The Rise of the Rehabilitative Ideal

1940s to Mid-1970s

chapter 3|28 pages

The Fall of Rehabilitation

1970s to 1990s

chapter 4|36 pages

Re-Emergence of Rehabilitation

2000 to 2005

chapter 5|21 pages

Correcting Corrections

2005 to Present

chapter |14 pages

Conclusion