| Research > Sex Offender Treatment Program > Press release | ||||
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| Press release | ||||
| Sex Offender Recidivism Study |
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Released
by the Alaska Department of Corrections, Mander, Anthony M.; Atrops, Martin E.; Barnes, Allan R.; and Munafo, Roseanne. (1996). Sex Offender Treatment Program: Initial Recidivism Study. Anchorage, AK: Offender Programs, Alaska Department of Corrections; and Alaska Justice Statistical Analysis Unit, Justice Center, University of Alaska Anchorage. (Available from Alaska Department of Corrections.) |
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The study also showed that the longer they stayed in treatment, the longer they lasted in the community without reoffense, and that those who reached the advanced stages of treatment committed no new offenses during the period studies. "These are positive results. They show our treatment program is working," said Margaret Pugh, Commissioner of Corrections. "No matter how you measure, the treatment group did better after release than untreated. And the further they go in treatment, the better their chances are of not reoffending." The four-year study was done in conjunction with the university's Anchorage Justice Center. It reviewed the records of 685 prisoners who served time in Alaska correctional facilities between January 1987 and August 1995, including 411 who participated in the state's primary sex offender treatment program at Hiland Mountain Correctional Center in Eagle River. Significant findings of the study are:
"It's important to realize that this
study does not claim we are curing sex offenders through treatment. The
fact is, sex offenders are never considered cured," Pugh said. "But
treatment can help offenders learn to control their behavior when they
return to society. The vast majority of offenders do return to their communities,
and treatment clearly is helping to reduce the number of victims of reoffenders." |
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