Reform Through Community

Resocializing Offenders in the Kibbutz

Michael Fischer author Brenda Geiger author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:30th Jul '91

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Reform Through Community cover

This book describes the subjective experiences of Israeli ex-convicts adopted as temporary members of Kibbutzim. Fischer and Geiger present a model for resocialization in the context of community.

Relating the kibbutz experience to theories of social psychology and criminology, Fischer and Geiger offer a model for resocialization combining group dynamics with social learning in a context of meaningful work and acceptance.

This book recounts a successful effort to resocialize criminal offenders placed in Kibbutzim. Social scientist Michael Fischer and educational philosopher Brenda Geiger describe the events and experiences that unfolded when a Kibbutz adopted an Israeli ex-convict as a temporary member of its collective. They conclude that resocialization is achievable: that a world of hard work, interdependence, and self-denial can successfully compete against the temptations for adventure and diversion in an offender's past and present.

Fischer and Geiger reconstruct the subjective experiences of the Israeli ex-convicts who were invited to live and work as members on separate Kibbutzim. They detail how a protective environment, daily routines, egalitarianism, peer group support, acceptance, and trust yielded involvement, commitment, and higher self-esteem on the part of the offenders. Relating the kibbutz experience to theories of social psychology and criminology, Fischer and Geiger offer a model for resocialization combining group dynamics with social learning in a context of meaningful work and acceptance. This study is valuable to students and scholars of social psychology, criminology, and Judaic Studies.

ISBN: 9780313279317

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

248 pages