From Incarceration to Integration: Rehabilitation Pathways for Sustainable Reintegration

Authors

  • Dr. Hassan Khan Public Health (Specialization) - Imperial College London Project Management (Specialization) - University of California, Irvine Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63056/

Keywords:

Recidivism Reduction , Prison Rehabilitation , Vocational Training in Prisons , Sustainable Reintegration , Criminal Justice Reform in Pakistan , Comparative Correctional Models

Abstract

Recidivism—the tendency of previously incarcerated people to reoffend—stays one of the maximum urgent demanding situations for crook justice structures worldwide. In Pakistan, this assignment is mainly acute because of intense overcrowding, old punitive approaches, and constrained get right of entry to to established rehabilitation or reintegration projects. Prisons in large part characteristic as webweb sites of containment as opposed to correction, leaving inmates with out the important education, vocational training, or psychosocial aid to reintegrate efficaciously into society. In contrast, worldwide studies from the United States, United Kingdom, and European Union display the transformative ability of rehabilitation-primarily based totally models. The U.S. “Second Chance Act” has funded lots of applications providing vocational training, mentoring, and education, with research inclusive of RAND (2013) reporting a 43% discount in recidivism amongst participants. In the U.K., the Offender Learning and Skills Service (OLASS) and network probation tasks have yielded promising discounts in reoffending, at the same time as in Norway, the “normalization principle” embedded in centers together with Halden Prison has helped obtain a number of the bottom recidivism costs globally (˜20%). This observe examines Pakistan’s contemporary correctional framework, identifies structural and cultural obstacles to powerful rehabilitation, and compares it with worldwide models. Through qualitative evaluation of policies, secondary data, and worldwide quality practices, it explores sustainable reintegration pathways that Pakistan can adopt. The look at argues that with the aid of using transferring from a punitive to a rehabilitative model—anchored in vocational training, education, and network reintegration—Pakistan can wreck the cycle of reoffending and make contributions to safer, greater resilient societies.

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Published

2025-08-19

How to Cite

From Incarceration to Integration: Rehabilitation Pathways for Sustainable Reintegration. (2025). ACADEMIA International Journal for Social Sciences, 4(3), 3497-3512. https://doi.org/10.63056/

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