Article: Cognitive Behavioral Intervention with Serious and Violent Juvenile Offenders: Some Historical Perspective1

COGNITIVE BEHAVIORAL Intervention (CBI) is an increasingly popular strategy for juvenile justice policy makers and practitioners looking for an effective way to meet public expectations for safety, security, and rehabilitation while addressing the various needs of the juvenile offender population (Glick, 2006a). The popularity of CBI parallels the field's renewed emphasis on what works or interventions with empirical outcomes. These evidence-based studies identify CBI as an effective approach to juvenile delinquency (Latessa, 2006; Lipsey, 1999; Pealer & Latessa, 2004), including the difficult population of juvenile sex offenders (Bingham, Turner & Piotrowski, 1995; Calley, 2007; ...

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