posted on 2009-01-01, 00:00authored bySharon Casey
According to the Good Lives Model, the inability to meet human needs in an adaptive manner - through lack of suitable circumstances, abilities, or opportunity - compels the individual to address this deficiency through other (maladaptive) means available to them. Thus the GLM contends that offending behavior serves a specific function and that different behaviors (crimes) are used to meet different needs. This presentation will discuss how the Good Lives Model can be used, in conjunction with that of the Risk-Needs Model, in a prison service. The combined model develops and implements programming for offenders prior to release into the community by mapping the offender's offence, social and psychological history against the secondary goods described in the Good Lives Model (i.e., the concrete means by which primary goods or human needs can be achieved), with identified deficits in secondary goods being the focus of intervention.
History
Event
International Congress on Law and Mental Health (31st : 2009 : New York, N.Y.)
Pagination
282 - 282
Publisher
International Academy of Law and Mental Health
Location
New York, N.Y.
Place of publication
Montreal, Quebec
Start date
2009-06-28
End date
2009-07-03
Language
eng
Publication classification
E3.1 Extract of paper
Title of proceedings
Abstracts of the XXXIst international congress on Law and Mental Health