All Stories

  1. The Psychology of Interpersonal Violence
  2. Childhood and Offense-Related Trauma in Young People Imprisoned in England and Wales for Murder and Other Acts of Serious Violence: A Descriptive Study
  3. Women Firesetters Admitted to Secure Psychiatric Services: Characteristics and Treatment Needs
  4. Historical developments in sex offender treatment
  5. Assessment and Treatment When Sex Is Attached to a Killing: A Case Study
  6. Alexithymia, Asperger's syndrome and criminal behaviour: a review
  7. Treatment progress in medium security hospital settings for women: Changes in symptoms, personality and service need from admission to discharge
  8. Personality disordered women in secure care: a treatment evaluation
  9. Developing an Assessment of Fire-Setting to Guide Treatment in Secure Settings: The St Andrew's Fire and Arson Risk Instrument (SAFARI)
  10. Efficacy of Correctional Cognitive Skills Programmes
  11. A profile of violent female offenders in secure psychiatric care
  12. St Andrew’s Fire & Arson Risk Questionnaire
  13. Forensic Psychology and Psychiatry
  14. Forensic Psychiatry
  15. Forensic Psychology
  16. Patients with a history of arson admitted to medium security: characteristics on admission and follow-up postdischarge
  17. The social cognition of violent offenders
  18. Behavior displayed by female victims during rapes committed by lone and multiple perpetrators.
  19. The influence of admission characteristics on outcome: Evidence from a medium secure forensic cohort
  20. The Editor is Gone, Long Live the Editor: A Personal Farewell
  21. Women transferred from prison to medium-secure psychiatric care: the therapeutic challenge
  22. Engagement in psychosocial treatment: Its relationship to outcome and care pathway progress for women in medium-secure settings
  23. Criminological Psychology
  24. Reconviction following a cognitive skills intervention: An alternative quasi-experimental methodology
  25. Social problem-solving interventions in medium secure settings for women
  26. A Short History of Corrections
  27. Architectural change and the effects on the perceptions of the ward environment in a medium secure unit for women
  28. The Effect on Reconviction of an Intervention for Drink-Driving Offenders in the Community
  29. Methodological Considerations in the Evaluation of Offender Interventions: The Problem of Attrition
  30. Evaluation of the Addressing Substance-Related Offending (ASRO) Program for Substance-Using Offenders in the Community: A Reconviction Analysis
  31. Involvement in extreme violence and violence-related trauma: A review with relevance to young people in custody
  32. Treatment of chronic anorexia nervosa: a 4-year follow-up of adult patients treated in an acute inpatient setting
  33. Antisocial and psychopathic personality disorders in forensic intellectual disability populations: what do we know so far?
  34. Long-Term Suicide Risk in Forensic Psychiatric Patients
  35. Women in medium secure care: tracking treatment progress for changes in risk profiles and treatment engagement
  36. Substance-abusing women in a medium secure psychiatric setting: characteristics and psychometric test performance
  37. Editor's introduction to the special edition
  38. Self-reported schemas in sexual offenders
  39. Dealing with Feelings: The Effectiveness of Cognitive Behavioural Group Treatment for Women in Secure Settings
  40. Group substance abuse treatment for women in secure services
  41. Tracking Risk Profiles and Outcome in a Medium Secure Service for Women: Use of theHoNOS-Secure
  42. Women referred for medium secure inpatient care: a population study over a six-year period
  43. Randomized control trials
  44. Commentary directions for group process work
  45. Characteristics of non-serial sexual homicide offenders: a review
  46. Structural, Item, and Test Generalizability of the Psychopathy Checklist--Revised to Offenders With Intellectual Disabilities
  47. Assessing Comorbid Substance Use in Detained Psychiatric Patients: Issues and Instruments for Evaluating Treatment Outcome
  48. Treatment manuals: The good, the bad and the useful
  49. Cognitive skills programmes for offenders
  50. Editor's Introduction to the Special Issue
  51. Assessing Comorbid Substance Use in Detained Psychiatric Patients: Issues and Instruments for Evaluating Treatment Outcome
  52. Aggression replacement training with adult male offenders within community settings: a reconviction analysis
  53. The development of a ‘best practice’ service for women in a medium-secure psychiatric setting: treatment components and evaluation
  54. Aggression Control Therapy for Violent Forensic Psychiatric Patients
  55. The Importance of Appropriate Allocation to Offending Behavior Programs
  56. Factors associated with quality of life in a cohort of forensic psychiatric in‐patients
  57. Evaluating offending behaviour programmes
  58. Incorporating context in linking crimes: an exploratory study of situational similarity and if-then contingencies
  59. Usefulness of the CANFOR-S for measuring needs among mentally disordered offenders resident in medium or low secure hospital services in the UK: a pilot evaluation
  60. The Violent Offender Treatment Program (VOTP): Development of a Treatment Program for Violent Patients in a High Security Psychiatric Hospital
  61. Evaluation of structured cognitive–behavioural treatment programmes in reducing criminal recidivism
  62. Development of the Observation Scale for Aggressive Behavior (OSAB) for Dutch forensic psychiatric inpatients with an antisocial personality disorder
  63. The psychology of linking crimes: A review of the evidence
  64. Offending behaviour programmes in the community: The effects on reconviction of three programmes with adult male offenders
  65. Long-term outcomes after discharge from medium secure care: a cause for concern
  66. Violent Forensic Psychiatric Patients: Individual Differences and Consequences for Treatment
  67. Sexual offenders’ explanations for their offending
  68. Predictive validity of the PCL-R in offenders with intellectual disability in a high secure hospital setting: Institutional aggression
  69. Interventions with arsonists and young fire setters: A survey of the national picture in England and Wales
  70. Editorial
  71. Case Linkage
  72. An adapted version of the Rosenzweig Picture-Frustration Study (PFS-AV) for the measurement of hostility in violent forensic psychiatric patients
  73. Criminogenic need and women offenders: A critique of the literature
  74. Offending Behaviour Programmes, * Clive R. Hollin and Emma J. Palmer, * Chichester, Wiley, 2006, pp. xiv + 293, ISBN 0 470 02336 8,  75.00
  75. The Adolescent Problems Inventory: A profile of incarcerated English male young offenders
  76. Physical aggression towards others in adults with learning disabilities: prevalence and associated factors
  77. Aggression Replacement Training: The Cognitive-Behavioral Context
  78. Offending Behaviour Programmes
  79. Note from the Editors
  80. Surveying Fear: Crime, Buses and New Paint
  81. The Development of Behavioural Coping Skills in a Repetitive and Deliberately Self-Harming Young Woman
  82. Managing Problematic Anger: The Development of a Treatment Program for Personality Disordered Patients in High Security
  83. The use of the Psychological Inventory of Criminal Thinking Styles with English young offenders
  84. Gisli H. Gudjonsson: The Psychology of Interrogations and Confessions. A Handbook. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons; 2003. Price: £34.95 (Hbk), ISBN: 0-471-49136-5, pp. xviii+684
  85. Handbook of offender assessment and treatment. Edited by Clive R. Hollin. Wiley, Chichester PO19 1UD, 2001. ISBN 0-471-98858-8
  86. Characteristics of 80 adolescents referred for secure inpatient care
  87. Predicting reconviction using the Psychological Inventory of Criminal Thinking Styles with English prisoners
  88. Using the Psychological Inventory of Criminal Thinking Styles with English prisoners
  89. Level of Service Inventory-Revised Profiles of Violent and Nonviolent Prisoners
  90. The Level of Service Inventory-Revised Profile of English Prisoners
  91. An Overview of Offender Rehabilitation: Something Old, Something Borrowed, Something New
  92. Handbook of offender assessment and treatment. Edited by Clive R. Hollin. Wiley, Chichester, PO19 1UD, 2001, 288 pp. ISBN 0-471-98858-8
  93. Editor' Note
  94. Investigating Burglars' Decisions: Factors Influencing Target Choice, Method of Entry, Reasons for Offending, Repeat Victimisation of a Property and Victim Awareness
  95. Editorial: Social problem solving and offenders
  96. Anger and general health in young offenders
  97. Handbook of the Psychology of Interviewing
  98. Forensic Psychology: A Guide to Practice
  99. Sociomoral reasoning, perceptions of parenting and self-reported delinquency in adolescents
  100. Anger and general health in young offenders
  101. The interrelations of socio-moral reasoning, perceptions of own parenting and attributions of intent with self-reported delinquency
  102. Within-program factors as predictors of drinking outcome following cognitive-behavioral treatment
  103. Sociomoral reasoning, perceptions of parenting and self-reported delinquency in adolescents
  104. Program Accreditation and Correctional Treatment
  105. PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY | Overview
  106. PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY | Psychiatry
  107. Prevention and management of violence in a secure youth centre
  108. An evaluation of the shortened embu scale in youngoffenders and non-offenders in England
  109. Treatment Programs for Offenders
  110. Social competence and sociomoral reasoning in young offenders
  111. Prevention and management of violence in a secure youth centre
  112. Editorial introduction
  113. An exploration of child sexual abusers' cognitive distortions with special reference to the role of anger
  114. Working with offenders: psychological practice in offender rehabilitation. Edited by Clive R. Hollin. Wiley, Chichester PO19 1UD, March 1996, 288 pp. ISBN 0-471-95776-3. ISBN 0-471-95349-0
  115. A comparison of patterns of moral development in young offenders and non-offenders
  116. How do you know if your treatment of problem drinking is successful?
  117. How do you know if your treatment of problem drinking is successful?
  118. Editorial introduction
  119. Clinical approaches to working with young offenders. Edited by Clive R. Hollin and Kevin Howells. Wiley, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 1UD, May 1996, 253 pp. ISBN 0471-95348-2
  120. Treating alcohol problems: a study of programme effectiveness and cost effectiveness according to length and delivery of treatment
  121. Alcoholism Treatment: Intake Variables as Outcome Predictors
  122. Self-Efficacy, Outcome Expectations, and Fantasies as Predictors of Alcoholics' Posttreatment Drinking
  123. First-stage evaluation of a treatment programme for personality disordered offenders
  124. Adolescents' experiences of anger in a residential setting
  125. Police beliefs about women who offend
  126. The influence of perceptions of own parenting on sociomoral reasoning, attributions for criminal behaviour, and self-reported delinquency
  127. The Scientist-Practitioner Model in Clinical Psychology: A Critique
  128. Staff Do Know Best: Peer & Therapist Prediction of Outcome Following Treatment for Problem Drinking
  129. Victim to offender: A review
  130. Managing behavioural treatment: policy and practice with delinquent adolescents. By Clive Hollin, Kevin Epps and David Kendrick. Routledge, London EC4P 4EE. January 1995. 240 pp. ISBN 0-415-05005-7. ISBN 0-415-05006-5
  131. Response bias and lay conceptions of personality and moral reasoning in offenders
  132. Assessing adolescent problems: an overview of the adolescent problems inventory
  133. Sociomoral reasoning, perceptions of own parenting and self-reported delinquency
  134. Adolescent firesetting: why do they say they do it?
  135. Single case design: A critique of methodology and analysis of recent trends
  136. Staff perceptions of organization change of treatment delivery on an addiction unit
  137. Substance abuse and offending
  138. Human aggression
  139. Intimate violence: Interdisciplinary perspectives
  140. New developments in british research
  141. Designing effective rehabilitation programmes for young offenders
  142. Managing behavioural treatment
  143. Psychology, Crime, & Law; Editorial introduction to the first edition
  144. The behavioral treatment of self-starvation and severe self-injury in a patient with borderline personality disorder
  145. The psychology of interrogations, confessions and testimony
  146. Social functioning and delinquency: A return to basics
  147. St Charles Centre
  148. At the threshold: The developing adolescent
  149. Clinical Approaches to Sex Offenders and their VictimsClive R. Hollin and Kevin Howells. New York: Wiley, 1991. pp. 329. £34.95 hardback. ISBN: 0-4719-2817-8.
  150. Environment and Behaviour Part II: An International and Multidisciplinary Bibliography 1982–1987. Vol 1: Alphabetical Listing By Authors, Key Word Index. Vol 2: Abstracts. Lenelis Kruse and Volker Schwartz. Kent, England: Bowker-Saur, 031989, pp. x + 9...
  151. Concern about the threat of nuclear war: Just another worry?
  152. Self-help manuals for problem drinking: The relative effects of their educational and therapeutic components
  153. Consistency of alcohol self-report measures in a male young offender population
  154. Delinquency: development, drink and deterrence
  155. The Short Alcohol Dependence Data (SADD) Questionnaire: norms and reliability data for male young offenders
  156. Psychology and crime
  157. Social structure and personality development. The individual as a productive processor of reality
  158. Handbook of Social Skills TrainingClive R. Hollin and Peter Trower (Eds.), London: Pergamon Press, 1986, Volume I, pp. 288; Volume II, pp. 284. Each Volume: £21.95 hardcover, £10.95 softcover. Two-volume Set: £36.00 hardcover, £18.00 softcover.
  159. Lay explanations of delinquency: Global or offence-specific?
  160. Behavioural social work: Training and application
  161. Lay knowledge of eyewitness behaviour: A British survey
  162. Social skills training with young offenders in a borstal: An evaluative study
  163. Preface
  164. Social Skills Training: Critique, and Future Development
  165. Innovative Clinical Applications of, Social Skills Training
  166. Clinical Applications and New, Directions for Social Skills, Training: An Introduction
  167. Books
  168. Neuroticism, life stress and concern about eating, body weight and apperance in a non-clinical population
  169. Books
  170. Social Skills Training with Young Offenders: False Expectations and the “Failure of Treatment”
  171. Book reviews
  172. Arousal and Eyewitness Memory
  173. A Critical Review of Social Skills Training with Young Offenders
  174. Eyewitness Testimony: The Effects of Discussion on Recall Accuracy and Agreement
  175. A skills training approach to the reduction of institutional offending
  176. Young offenders and alcohol: A survey of the drinking behaviour of a Borstal population
  177. The violent young offender: a small group study of a Borstal population
  178. Nature of the witnessed incident and status of interviewer as variables influencing eyewitness recall
  179. Effects of the type of incident and the number of perpetrators on eyewitness memory.
  180. Contemporary Psychology:
  181. Does Punishment Motivate Offenders to Change?
  182. Offending Behaviour Programmes: History and Development
  183. Offending Behaviour Programmes: Controversies and Resolutions
  184. Risk–Needs Assessment and Allocation to Offender Programmes
  185. Treatments for Angry Aggression
  186. Offending Behaviour Programmes and Contention: Evidence-Based Practice, Manuals, and Programme Evaluation
  187. Serial Juvenile Sex Offenders and Their Offenses
  188. Young Offenders and Alcohol: Relative Merits of Institutions and Community Prevention Initiatives
  189. The Social Competence of Young Offenders: A Return to Basics