Abstract
Dog programs in correctional facilities have been criticized for relying too much on anecdotal evidence of success. To address this limitation, a team of social scientists in Philadelphia conducted a comprehensive evaluation of the impacts of a prison-based canine program of rescue, training, and inmate learning. The program was a 10 week “live-in” design, in which four dogs rescued from imminent euthanasia were placed with eight inmates of the Philadelphia city jail’s Alternative Sentencing and Detention Unit. The participating inmates were taught general animal care and specific training techniques. At the conclusion of the 10-week program, each dog passed the Canine Good Citizenship test and every inmate received a certificate of completion of the animal training curriculum. The project proposed an eight step evaluation strategy proposed by Furst (2011) that others can adapt to suit their specific programs. The phases included: (1) qualitative interviews with all participants, (2) post-only Qualities of Life study, no control group, (3) pre-post Qualities of Life study, no control group, (4) pre-post Qualities of Life study with control group, (5) incident reports analysis with a pre-post with comparison group, (6) post-release follow up for recidivism analysis with comparison group, (7) cost outcome analysis (projecting costs with and without lowered recidivism) and (8) cohort tracking (to add to the knowledge/data base/numbers). Due to funding limitations, only the first two phases were completed; they form the basis for this chapter. The authors draw upon this experience as support for the contention that dog programs in corrections will continue to be privately funded, sporadic interventions that are subject to discontinuation unless the cost-benefit can be demonstrated to decision makers.
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Conroy, J.W., Coppola, E.C., Ferris, C.S., Conroy, N.L., Devlin, S.J., Boc, J.A. (2019). Evaluating Outcomes in a Prison-Based Canine Program: A Mixed-Method Analysis of New Leash on Life. In: Jalongo, M. (eds) Prison Dog Programs. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-25618-0_10
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