The effects of positive peer culture on the recidivism rates of male young offenders in Manitoba

The study analysed a sample of male youth correctional discharges within Manitoba from January 1, 2000 to December 31, 2000. Agassiz Youth Centre (AYC) discharges were compared to a matched sample of discharges from other institutions using archival data (N = 150). Subsequent numbers of charges, con...

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Main Author: Caslor, Michael Dylan
Language:en_US
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3809
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spelling ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-38092014-01-31T03:31:55Z The effects of positive peer culture on the recidivism rates of male young offenders in Manitoba Caslor, Michael Dylan The study analysed a sample of male youth correctional discharges within Manitoba from January 1, 2000 to December 31, 2000. Agassiz Youth Centre (AYC) discharges were compared to a matched sample of discharges from other institutions using archival data (N = 150). Subsequent numbers of charges, convictions, months incarcerated and times incarcerated from each group were examined over two years in order to assess the effectiveness of AYC's Positive Peer Culture (PPC) program. These variables were compared while controlling for age, race, education, place of residence, family background, gang affiliation, type of offence, seriousness of most serious offence, number of times incarcerated, past risk of suicide, and risk to reoffend. Results suggest that PPC does have a significant impact on certain measures of recidivism including total number of times incarcerated, total number of months incarcerated, seriousness of the most serious offence and time before reinvolvement. Exploratory analysis also measured PPC's comparative effect on offenders with different personal characteristics. Results suggest that youth who live in rural areas, who do not have a history of suicide risk, who reside with at least one parent, or who are a low risk to reoffend had better outcomes if they were discharges from AYC than from the comparison group. Although this study is unable to isolate all confounding variables, it will be able to give some insight into the effect of PPC on recidivism. Recommendations address the application and interpretation of PPC at AYC as well as the direction for future research. An extensive literature review is also included. 2009-12-09T16:45:35Z 2009-12-09T16:45:35Z 2004-08-01-01:09T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3809 en_US The reproduction of this thesis has been made available by authority of the copyright owner solely for the purpose of private study and research, and may only be reproduced and copied as permitted by copyright laws or with express written authorization from the copyright owner.
collection NDLTD
language en_US
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description The study analysed a sample of male youth correctional discharges within Manitoba from January 1, 2000 to December 31, 2000. Agassiz Youth Centre (AYC) discharges were compared to a matched sample of discharges from other institutions using archival data (N = 150). Subsequent numbers of charges, convictions, months incarcerated and times incarcerated from each group were examined over two years in order to assess the effectiveness of AYC's Positive Peer Culture (PPC) program. These variables were compared while controlling for age, race, education, place of residence, family background, gang affiliation, type of offence, seriousness of most serious offence, number of times incarcerated, past risk of suicide, and risk to reoffend. Results suggest that PPC does have a significant impact on certain measures of recidivism including total number of times incarcerated, total number of months incarcerated, seriousness of the most serious offence and time before reinvolvement. Exploratory analysis also measured PPC's comparative effect on offenders with different personal characteristics. Results suggest that youth who live in rural areas, who do not have a history of suicide risk, who reside with at least one parent, or who are a low risk to reoffend had better outcomes if they were discharges from AYC than from the comparison group. Although this study is unable to isolate all confounding variables, it will be able to give some insight into the effect of PPC on recidivism. Recommendations address the application and interpretation of PPC at AYC as well as the direction for future research. An extensive literature review is also included.
author Caslor, Michael Dylan
spellingShingle Caslor, Michael Dylan
The effects of positive peer culture on the recidivism rates of male young offenders in Manitoba
author_facet Caslor, Michael Dylan
author_sort Caslor, Michael Dylan
title The effects of positive peer culture on the recidivism rates of male young offenders in Manitoba
title_short The effects of positive peer culture on the recidivism rates of male young offenders in Manitoba
title_full The effects of positive peer culture on the recidivism rates of male young offenders in Manitoba
title_fullStr The effects of positive peer culture on the recidivism rates of male young offenders in Manitoba
title_full_unstemmed The effects of positive peer culture on the recidivism rates of male young offenders in Manitoba
title_sort effects of positive peer culture on the recidivism rates of male young offenders in manitoba
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3809
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