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Remaking Relapse Prevention with Sex Offenders
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Remaking Relapse Prevention with Sex Offenders
A Sourcebook


April 2000 | 576 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc

"This book is a rich source of information on the application of relapse prevention with sex offenders. It presents readers promising directions for change and areas that need revision based on new research findings and the integration of emerging theoretical models that show considerable promise in this field. . . . The material in this book should help us construct a better, safer vehicle for the treatment of sex offenders in the new millennium."

–from the Foreword by G. Alan Marlatt, University of Washington

It is estimated that relapse prevention methods are employed in more than 90% of all North American sex offender treatment programs (of which there are more than 2,000). Comparable statistics are true in most industrialized countries around the world. Over the last decade a great deal has been learned about the treatment of sexual offenders, and particularly about relapse prevention. This sourcebook provides clinicians with the most current, practical information about working with sex offenders to prevent relapse. It reflects the advances and insights of the past decade since the publication of Relapse Prevention with Sex Offenders, focusing on the major reconceptualizations, revisions, and innovations that will chart treatment programs for the first decade of the new millennium.


 
PART ONE: RELAPSE PREVENTION IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
D R Laws, Stephen M Hudson and Tony Ward
The Original Model of Relapse Prevention with Sex Offenders
Promises Unfulfilled

 
 
PART TWO: A REVISIONIST CRITIQUE
R Karl Hanson
What Is so Special about Relapse Prevention?
W L Marshall and Dana Anderson
Do Relapse Prevention Components Enhance Treatment Effectiveness?
Susan A Stoner and William H George
Relapse Prevention and Harm Reduction
Areas of Overlap

 
 
PART THREE: CONCEPTUAL AND CLINICAL REVISIONS
Tony Ward and Stephen M Hudson
A Self-Regulation Model of Relapse Prevention
Stephen M Hudson and Tony Ward
Relapse Prevention
Assessment and Treatment Implications

 
William O'Donohue, Tamara Penix and Erin Oksol
Behavioral Economics
Understanding Sexual Behavior, Preference and Self-Control

 
 
PART FOUR: CLINICAL INNOVATIONS: ASSESSMENT AND TREATMENT
Kurt M Bumby
Empathy Inhibition, Intimacy Deficits and Attachment Difficulties in Sex Offenders
Calvin M Langton and W L Marshall
The Role of Cognitive Distortions in Relapse Prevention Program
Ruth E Mann
Managing Resistance and Rebellion in Relapse Prevention Intervention
Don Grubin
Complementing Relapse Prevention with Medical Intervention
Michael H Miner
Competency-Based Assessment
Yolanda M Fernandez and W L Marshall
Contextual Issues in Relapse Prevention Treatment
Georgia F Cumming and Robert J McGrath
External Supervision
How Can It Increase the Effectiveness of Relapse Prevention

 
 
PART FIVE: SEXUAL PREFERENCE ASSESSMENT
Robert J Konopasky and Aaron W B Konopasky
Remaking Penile Plethysmography
Michael A O'Connell
Polygraphy
Assessment and Community Monitoring

 
Lane Fischer
The Abel Screen
A Non-Intrusive Alternative?

 
 
PART SIX: PROGRAMS: MAJOR INTERVENTIONS USING RELAPSE PREVENTION
Janice K Marques et al
Preventing Relapse in Sex Offenders
What We Learned from SOTEP's Experimental Treatment Program

 
Ruth E Mann and David Thornton
An Evidence-Based Relapse Prevention Program
 
PART SEVEN: RELAPSE PREVENTION APPLIED TO SPECIAL POPULATIONS
William D Murphy and I Jacqueline Page
Relapse Prevention with Adolescent Sex Offenders
James L Haaven and Emily M Coleman
Treatment of the Developmentally Disabled Sex Offender
Joanna Clarke and Adam J Carter
Relapse Prevention with Sexual Murderers
Hilary Eldridge and Jacqui Sradjian
Replacing the Function of Abusive Behaviors for the Offender
Remaking Relapse Prevention in Working with Women Who Sexually Abuse Children

 
Lawrence Ellerby, Jacqueline Bedard and Shirl Chartrand
Holism, Wellness and Spirituality
Moving from Relapse Prevention to Healing

 
 
PART EIGHT: THE BOTTOM LINE
Anthony Beech and Dawn Fisher
Maintaining Relapse Prevention Skills and Strategies in Treated Child Abusers
Jean Proulx et al
How Does Recidivism Risk Assessment Predict Survival?
R Karl Hanson
Treatment Outcome and Evaluation Problems (and Solutions)
 
PART NINE: THE WAY FORWARD
Stephen M Hudson, Tony Ward and D Richard Laws
Wither Relapse Prevention

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