
LZ/A/2-4
Correctional psychology with young offenders in the community: Philosophical musings
A respectable and growing body of research exists on
"what works" in correctional psychology. However, the focus of the
research seems to be on "what to do" and "how to do" clinical practice
issues such as client-selection strategies (level of risk or need),
therapeutic approaches (such as cognitive-behavioural) and outcome
prediction. Less adequately addressed are "why to do" issues related to
the delivery of psychological services, particularly in community
settings.
This article attempts to fill this void by suggesting a particular
philosophical orientation to clinical work with young offenders in the
community. The article argues that the orientation adopted by Dr. Albert
Ellis and other practitioners of Rational-Emotive Behaviour Therapy
(including the author) is well suited to work with young offenders, and
has direct and practical implications for therapeutic procedures and
practices. Rational-Emotive Behaviour Therapy In many jurisdictions,
public and professional opinion seem to agree that:
young offenders are not interested in changing their behaviour in any meaningful or lasting way;
young offender punishment, particularly in the community, is not severe enough to motivate change;
young offenders respond poorly to authority and even worse to psychological intervention; and
young offenders attend counselling largely for rewards such as weekend passes.
However, my experience dramatically contradicts
these observations. I would argue that the philosophical approach of
Rational-Emotive Behaviour Therapy (well recognized in the larger
psychological community, but seldom discussed in a correctional context)
provides the basis for rewarding work with young offenders. Equality of
worth Rational-Emotive Behaviour Therapy's first philosophical premise
is that all human beings (by virtue of being alive) are equal in worth,
regardless of their conduct. This statement might easily be dismissed as
high-minded moralization, but it is quite the opposite.
Its practical implication is that the practitioner implicitly accepts
the young offender, no matter how awful his or her conduct, as fully
deserving of psychological intervention. Client guilt and shame (from
self-condemnation) are rejected as legitimate motivators for change and
are treated as symptoms to be remedied.
From the client's perspective, the explicit sharing of this assumption
during the first visit can indicate a therapist's acceptance of the
offender and set the stage for honest self-revelation. The refusal to
discredit the offender's "humanness" arguably reduces the young
offender's defensiveness, generating a greater offender willingness to
examine his or her conduct. Responsible hedonism The second
philosophical assumption is that humans are basically hedonistic:
pleasure and/or happiness is their ultimate goal. Practitioners of
Rational-Emotive Behaviour Therapy therefore encourage the pursuit of
"responsible hedonism," seeking a balance between short- and long-term
personally meaningful goals that improve the young offender's world or,
at least, cause it no undue harm.
A young offender's "what's in it for me?" attitude is not seen as
resistance, but as a starting point for therapeutic intervention. The
therapy aims to replace devotion to short-term gratification with, not
self-sacrifice, but a balanced strategy that doesn't sabotage
longer-term happiness. Ongoing psychological assessment A third
philosophical assumption, one that often receives lip service in the
correctional community but is rarely applied, is that psychological
assessment should be an ongoing and vital part of the treatment process.
This means eliminating the endless tests and classification schemes that
act as entry levels to therapy. It also requires the recognition that
behaviours, cognitions and emotions (not human beings) are the
assessment targets and that a diagnosis not leading to differential
treatment is clinically useless. Finally, it requires the understanding
that "secret" diagnoses kept from the client tend to result in
manipulation rather than psycho-educational treatment, and that
assessment should complement, not replace, reasonable offender goals.
The all-too-common occurrence of young offenders arriving at the
practitioner's office, fully aware of their diagnoses but ignorant of
strategies for change, validates the importance of this assumption.
Efficiency The fourth principle underlying desirable clinical
intervention is efficiency. This principle generates several practical
guidelines. The most obvious is avoiding excessive involvement in an
offender's life. Equally important, but perhaps more subtle, are ranking
the client's goals for therapy, boosting the client's sense of success
by aiming for some emotional change within one or two sessions, and
determining the client's commitment to therapy (two or 20 sessions?) and
adapting the therapeutic approach to the time available.
An "efficiency" mindset allows the therapist to target achievable rather
than "textbook" goals that the client may have no interest in achieving.
Further, clients often report such efficient practices to be empowering
- they feel that they are not being subjected to the therapist's agenda.
This can only contribute to rapport and client motivation. Three basic
insights Three basic insights must also be communicated to the offender:
emotional and behavioural disturbances are caused primarily by inappropriate mental processes (cognitions), not outside factors;
today's emotional disturbances, regardless of their original cause(s), are prolonged by their transformation into harmful thought processes; and
lasting changes usually come only with hard work aimed at changing inappropriate thoughts and behaviours.
These three insights are especially important given
the prevalence of "victimhood" in our culture - whining, self-pity,
other-blaming and claims of personal blamelessness. These culturally
sanctioned ploys, together with the adolescent tendency to deny
accountability, make it difficult for young offenders to accept
responsibility for their own change. However, it is a vital starting
point for therapeutic change. "Deep" change The final, and arguably most
important premise in Rational-Emotive Behaviour Therapy is the
therapist's recognition that "deep" change is both achievable and
desirable. Fundamental and lasting change is to be valued over simple
behavioural change, and this requires changes in criminogenic and
self-harming offender core philosophies.
The practical implication of this assumption is that diversionary
tactics (such as relaxation, time outs and counting backwards by 10s)
should be replaced with approaches involving actual changes to thought
processes. Lasting change The philosophy outlined in this article
provides a strategic and effective framework for clinical intervention
with young offenders in community settings. Popular assumptions about
the near-universal resistance of young offenders to therapy appear
unfounded. Instead, working with this client group requires:
special attention to nonjudgmental acceptance of young offenders and their responsibly hedonistic goals;
establishment of rapport and motivation though quick, efficient focusing of practical interventions on offender-determined goals;
bolstering offender feelings of accountability
through the approach's "three insights"; and
therapist determination to avoid the easier diversionary methods and
to encourage more radical changes with this clientele.
To paraphrase Dr. Ellis, lasting change is difficult for most people, most of the time. But, sound philosophies of intervention (as discussed in this article) appear to ease the burden for this challenging offender population.
(1) W. Winogron, Ph.D., C. Psych., 170 Laurier Ave. West, Suite 912, Ottawa, Ontario K1P 5V5.