Dealing with offending behaviour- Behaviour modification- A01

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  • Created by: MollyL20
  • Created on: 02-11-21 17:04
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  • Dealing with offending behaviour-  Behaviour modification
    • 1. Aims to reinforce obedient or desirable behaviour in offenders, based on the behaviourist principle that all behaviour is learned.
      • 2. Undesirable behaviour should therefore be punished to reduce the likelihood of such behaviour being repeated.
    • Token economy
      • Desirable behaviours, such as avoiding conflict and keeping a cell tidy, can be rewarded with tokens- secondary reinforcers 
      • Which can be exchanged for a primary reinforcer- something desirable such as extra food or a phone call home.
      • Non-compliance or disobedience results in tokens and their associated privileges being withheld.
    • Changing behaviour
      • To make this process more manageable, a desirable behaviour, such as avoiding conflict, is broken down into more achievable sub-steps, such as working well in a group. 
      • The same behaviours would be rewarded by every person the offender comes into contact with.
    • Hobbs and Holt (1976)  
      • Found that there was a significant difference in positive behaviours amongst a group of young offenders undergoing a token economy system, compared to a non-token economy group
      • Suggesting it is effective in modifying behaviour.
    • Rice examined the outcomes from 92 prisoners on a token economy programme in a maximum-security psychiatric hospital and found two things. 
      • One that if it was effective for an individual ten it continued to be so while in the institution. 
      • Two the success shown within the institution had no influence on the offenders’ outcomes once released. 
      • This seems to suggest that it works for certain individuals only and only short term, meaning the programme has no rehabilitative abilities. 

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