Community safety and recidivism in Australia: Breaking the cycle of reoffending to produce safer communities through vocational training

Document Type

Journal Article

Faculty

Faculty of Business and Law

School

School of Management / Centre for Innovative Practice

RAS ID

12846

Comments

Bahn, S. T. (2011). Community safety and recidivism in Australia: Breaking the cycle of reoffending to produce safer communities through vocational training. International Journal of Training Research, 9(3), 261-266. Available here

Abstract

This article links community safety with recidivism and argues that reintegration of offenders is a community responsibility. The paper discusses the role of vocational training for incarcerated offenders as a tool to reduce recidivism. Training and subsequent employment for released offenders are factors that assist them to become contributing members of community who are less likely to reoffend. Research has shown that prisoner training and education can successfully address recidivism rates. Therefore, the cost of incarceration is reduced whilst the level of community safety is increased. However, Australian Vocational Education Training (VET) delivery in prisons requires improvement and a greater emphasis on holistic support from community groups is essential for successful reintegration.

DOI

10.5172/ijtr.9.3.261

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Link to publisher version (DOI)

10.5172/ijtr.9.3.261