1st Edition
Sexual Offenders and the Criminal System Perceptions, Beliefs, and Science
Introduction
Chapter 1. The Four Pillars of Justice
Chapter 2. The First Pillar: Punishment
Chapter 3. The Second Pillar: Justice for the Victim(s)
Chapter 4. The Third Pillar: Supervision
Chapter 5. The Fourth Pillar: Rehabilitation
Chapter 6. Special Cases of Sexual Offenders: Their Disposition and Treatment
Chapter 7. Potential Solutions to Provide Informed Justice for Sexual Offenders
Chapter 8. Summary
Epilogue
Appendix A. A List of Common Abbreviations
Appendix B. Common Restrictions Placed on Sexual Offenders Following a Plea
Arrangement, Sentencing, or Release From Incarceration – An Abbreviated List
Annotated Bibliography
Biography
Barry Maletzky, M.D., graduated from Columbia University with a B.A. in psychophysiology and from The State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center, Stony Brook Campus, with an M.D. He completed a residency in psychiatry at the Oregon Health Sciences University. Following two years of service in the military, he entered the practice of psychiatry in Portland, Oregon. Dr. Maletzky began specializing in several fields in psychiatry, including the treatment of severe depression, the use of electroconvulsive therapy, and the assessment and treatment of sexual offenders. In 1975 he founded the Portland Sexual Abuse Clinic to treat sexual offenders and their victims. Since that time, the clinic has become one of the largest and most persistent such clinics in the world.
Dr. Maletzky has been conducting clinical research projects since his residency days. He is the author of more than 65 articles in peer-reviewed medical journals, ten chapters in edited textbooks, and six original textbooks of psychiatry in various subspecialties. He served as editor of a medical journal from 1994 through 2004. Dr. Maletzky is the recipient of numerous military and civilian awards, including the Dean’s Award from OHSU. He partially retired in 2007 in order to devote more time to his teaching, research, volunteer, and consulting activities, including membership on the boards of nonprofit organizations working with those just released from prison, those who subsist below the poverty line, and those within the LGBTQ community.






