Alcohol Education and Young Offenders (e-bog) af Baldwin, Steve
Baldwin, Steve (forfatter)

Alcohol Education and Young Offenders e-bog

875,33 DKK (inkl. moms 1094,16 DKK)
Since the establishment of the first alcohol education course (ABC) for young offenders in 1981, this fono of service delivery has been expanded across the United Kingdom. While some before-and-after data have been reported, no con- trolled evaluations have been completed on effectiveness with this type of inter- vention. The present research reports a series of evaluation studies to investigat...
E-bog 875,33 DKK
Forfattere Baldwin, Steve (forfatter)
Forlag Springer
Udgivet 6 december 2012
Genrer Psychology
Sprog English
Format pdf
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9781461231301
Since the establishment of the first alcohol education course (ABC) for young offenders in 1981, this fono of service delivery has been expanded across the United Kingdom. While some before-and-after data have been reported, no con- trolled evaluations have been completed on effectiveness with this type of inter- vention. The present research reports a series of evaluation studies to investigate the impact of ABCs on offending and drinking behavior. Young offenders were recruited from local courts. The first study, completed in Dundee, reported results from a comparative evaluation between two types of ABCs. As an attention-placebo study, one group received a behavioral ABC with program contents designed to reduce drinking and offending behaviors. Some dependent variable differences between the two groups were observed at follow-up. The second study was established in Glasgow as a replication of the main study. The third study used a quasi-experimental design to establish a no-intervention control group in the Perth courts. Young offenders were recruited to complete screening interviews, without any intervention. The intervention group was re- cruited from courts in Forfar, a similar rural town. This group completed an infonoation-based ABC, using educational materials about alcohol and its effects. Some dependent variable differences were observed at follow-up. The fourth study was based in a Young Offender Institution at Forfar. Prerelease young offenders were randomly assigned to either a no-intervention control group or a behavioral ABC group. Some dependent variable differences were reported at follow-up.