629 research outputs found

    McIvor, G

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    Review of the Aberdeen Problem-Solving Approach

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    Presentation delivered by Lorraine Murray, Hannah Graham and Jane Eunson, with co-authors and fellow researchers Gill McIvor and Margaret Malloch, at the Scottish Government launch event, 'Problem Solving Approaches' of this research on 5th September 2018 in Edinburgh

    The rise of female imprisonment in Scotland

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    Offending by women differs in a number of important ways from offending by men: it is less common, less frequent and less serious (Burman 2004; McIvor 2007; Gelb 2010; Schwartz and Steffensmeier 2007)). Women are typically convicted of relatively minor crimes that pose less public risk and, because they are usually convicted of offences that are less serious than those committed by men, they are less likely than men to receive custodial sentences. However, female imprisonment has increased dramatically in many western jurisdictions over the last 15-20 years as evidenced by significant increases in the numbers given sentences of imprisonment, in daily female prison populations, and in the rate of imprisonment of women (McIvor 2010). Indeed, in many countries, including Australia, England and Wales, New Zealand, Scotland and the US, the female prison population has increased at a faster rate than the male prison population in recent years (Walmsley 2012)

    Developments in probation in Scotland

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    This chapter looks at the developments in probation in Scotlan
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