Breaking the cycle: substance abuse treatment and recidivism in California

Show full item record

Title: Breaking the cycle: substance abuse treatment and recidivism in California
Author: Yakshina, Tatyana
Abstract: As substance abuse is common among repeat offenders, treatment is one effective strategy to stop the revolving door of corrections and represents the state's best hope in combating recidivism due to substance abuse. Using probit regression, three treatment eligible groups and their subsequent recidivism rates are examined following one and two year observation periods for offenders who paroled in fiscal year 2005/2006. Relative to non-treated offenders, probobility of recidivism is 18 percent lower among offenders who complete both in-prison and community aftercare treatment; probobility of recidivism is 15 percent lower among offenders who complete in-prison treatment only. This analysis provides quantitative economic evidence that substance abuse treatment programs are effective in reducing recidivism in California.
Description: Thesis (M.A., Economics) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2011.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10211.9/1092
Date: 2011-05-03

Files in this item

Files Size Format View
FT_2011-04-08.pdf 270.5Kb PDF Thumbnail
FT_2011-04-08.doc 437.2Kb Microsoft Word View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show full item record



Advanced Search

Browse

My Account