Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/28398
Title: Alternatives to detention in Europe: promising practices and tools, training package, Directorate General for Justice
Authors: Stefani, G
Freeman, R
Lloyd, G
Momchilov, A
Parmentier, S
Sullo, P
Issue Date: 19-Apr-2016
Publisher: Associazione Comunità Papa Giovanni XXIII on behalf of the European Union. Directorate General for Justice
Citation: Stefani, G. et al. (2016) Alternatives to detention in Europe: promising practices and tools, training package, Directorate General for Justice (Reducing prison population: advanced tools of justice in Europe: Guidelines). Rimini: Comunita’ Papa Giovanni XXIII, pp. 1 - 38. Available at: https://discovery.dundee.ac.uk/en/publications/alternatives-to-imprisonment-in-europe-promising-practices-and-to (accessed: 3 February 2024).
Series/Report no.: Reducing prison population: advanced tools of justice in Europe;
Abstract: ‘Alternatives to detention in Europe: promising practices and tools: a training package’ is the result of a 2-year work programme called, ‘Reducing Prison Population: advanced tools of justice in Europe’ JUST/2013/JPEN/AG/4489. This programme was launched in March 2014 and coordinated by the Italian “Community of Pope John XXIII” Association, and developed in 7 European countries (Italy, Bulgaria, France, Germany Latvia, Romania, Scotland: United Kingdom) with the financial support of the European Commission-Directorate General for Justice. The aim was to improve knowledge and to exchange ‘innovative measures of practices alternative to imprisonment, both in pre and post trial phase’. One specific objective was to construct a Training Package for ‘operators and professionals working in services that provided alternatives to detention’. In order to promote alternatives to detention across European Countries, the project investigated the use of, and applied specific evidence-based criteria, to examine the effectiveness of alternatives to imprisonment. Workstreams 1 and 2 of ‘Reducing the prison population: advanced tools of justice in Europe’, showed that good and promising practices existed within European Member States. Based upon this evidence, it was decided that a training package should focused upon pre and post-trial phases, should incorporate the good and promising practices, be available to all practitioners (such as police officers, prosecutors, judges, probation specialists, representatives from nongovernmental organisations and individuals working in criminal justice and penal reform) together with policy makers and finally, to be used, in addition, as an operational and/or reference tool. This training package, therefore, embodies and presents a diverse group of innovative and promising alternatives to detention developed by the partner countries. Additional information about ‘Reducing Prison Population: advanced tools of justice in Europe’, may be found at: www.reducingprison.eu
Description: This training package was written by Giorgia Stefani, Research Coordinator for this project (Comunità Papa Giovanni XXIII), in close cooperation and consultation with Ruth Freeman, Professor of Dental Public Health Research (DHRSU, University of Dundee) and Glyn Lloyd (Service Manager, Criminal Justice, Dundee City Council). It builds significantly on the “Reducing Prison Population: advanced tools of justice in Europe” Transnational Research.
Acknowledgements: Principal contributors to this Training Package included Andrey Momchilov (IGA-Crime Prevntion Fund, BULGARIA), Stephan Parmentier and Piero Sullo (International Society for Criminology, FRANCE), Arthur Hartmann and Alexander Bähr (Institut für Polizei- und Sicherheitsforschung (IPoS) GERMANY), Sara Zanni and Giorgio Pieri (Comunità Papa Giovanni XXIII, ITALY) Emilio Gregori, Marta Distaso and Lydia Veronica Palumbo (Synergia, ITALIA), Roberta Bisi and Raffaella Sette (CIRVIS-SDE, Università di Boloigna, ITALIA) Ilona Kronberga and Sanita Sile (Providus, LATVIA), Viorica Marcut and Francisc Csizmarik (Generatie Tanara, ROMANIA), Ruth Freeman and Davis Buls (DHRSU, University of Dundee, UK:SCOTLAND).
Project coordinator: Sara Zanni
URI: https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/28398
Appears in Collections:Brunel Law School Research Papers

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