Punishment Versus Rehabilitation Study Under the Department of Homeland Security
Session Number
Biz INTRN 01
Advisor(s)
Michael Brody
Discipline
Business
Start Date
17-4-2025 11:10 AM
End Date
17-4-2025 11:25 AM
Abstract
New York's historical reliance on punitive drug policies has created tension between the goals of retribution and rehabilitation, leading to significant social and economic consequences.
I will form a research paper studying the hypothesis that rehabilitation-focused approaches to addressing drug offenses are more effective than punitive measures because they address the root causes of addiction, reduce recidivism rates, prevent the disproportionate impact on minority communities, and utilize public resources more efficiently than the failed Rockefeller Drug Laws demonstrated over decades of implementation in New York.
Through a qualitative methodology, I intend to discover how evidence-based
rehabilitation approaches in New York correlate with improved post-intervention outcomes compared to purely punitive measures. I expect to find that participants in comprehensive treatment programs show not only lower formal recidivism rates but also qualitatively different recovery trajectories marked by improved coping strategies, stronger support networks, and more sustainable community reintegration.
I will consider my hypothesis supported if rehabilitation participants that I read personal reviews of and who are represented in the data sets I look at consistently demonstrate better outcomes across multiple dimensions of recovery and lower rates of return to substance use and criminal behavior.
Punishment Versus Rehabilitation Study Under the Department of Homeland Security
New York's historical reliance on punitive drug policies has created tension between the goals of retribution and rehabilitation, leading to significant social and economic consequences.
I will form a research paper studying the hypothesis that rehabilitation-focused approaches to addressing drug offenses are more effective than punitive measures because they address the root causes of addiction, reduce recidivism rates, prevent the disproportionate impact on minority communities, and utilize public resources more efficiently than the failed Rockefeller Drug Laws demonstrated over decades of implementation in New York.
Through a qualitative methodology, I intend to discover how evidence-based
rehabilitation approaches in New York correlate with improved post-intervention outcomes compared to purely punitive measures. I expect to find that participants in comprehensive treatment programs show not only lower formal recidivism rates but also qualitatively different recovery trajectories marked by improved coping strategies, stronger support networks, and more sustainable community reintegration.
I will consider my hypothesis supported if rehabilitation participants that I read personal reviews of and who are represented in the data sets I look at consistently demonstrate better outcomes across multiple dimensions of recovery and lower rates of return to substance use and criminal behavior.