The Journal of Behavior Analysis of Offender and Victim - Treatment and Prevention
The journal's mission statement is as follows: “The mission of this new journal will be to highlight the role of behavior analysis in adult and juvenile crime prevention, assessment of offenders including risk assessment, and treatment programs from a behavioral orientation including but not limited to the use of behavioral counseling, collaborative goal setting, contingency management, functional assessment, functionally based interventions, respondent conditioning and counter conditioning procedures, functional analytic psychotherapy and acceptance and commitment therapy. The journal will also place a major focus articles on that present behavior analytic and social learning models of the development of criminal behavior, the behavioral treatment of victims, victimology from a behavior analytic perspective, behavioral interventions for violent crime, functional assessment of offender motivation, and other types of criminal activity, including behavioral approaches to the reduction of terrorism and insurgency reduction. We see all of these topics as suitable for publication in this journal. In addition, the journal will publish articles on behavior analysis in the treatment of the offender that are policy oriented. Articles on forensic behavior analysis, testifying, due process, and behavioral profiling of criminal behavior will be considered. Finally, organizational behavior management and positive behavioral support articles dealing with system change issues in schools and criminal institutions will also be considered."
The
vision
of
the
Journal
of
Behavior
Analysis
of
Offender
and
Victim
-
Treatment
and
Prevention
is
as
follows:
By
2001,
the
Bureau
of
Justice
Statistics
estimated
that
2.7%
of
adults
in
the
U.S.
had
served
time
in
prison.
This
is
almost
a
full
percentage
over
the
1.8%
that
were
estimated
to
have
served
back
in
1991.
This
dramatic
rise
in
those
serving
in
prisons
speaks
to
the
need
to
strong
offender
treatment
and
prevention
programs.
We
envision
a
world
in
which
evidenced
based
practices
are
in
place
to
reduce
recidivism
and
serve
as
a
functional
alternative
to
reducing
crime.