Young offenders learn to be parents andn
Young offenders learn to be parents and not abuse women.
Madrid, May 11 .- The Community of Madrid has launched two pioneering programs in Spain to facilitate the reintegration of juvenile offenders, one that teaches parenting and another designed to eradicate gender violence.
The Minister of Presidency, Justice and Interior, Francisco Granados, visited the detention facility Jose de las Heras, located in Carabanchel of Madrid, in which the usual programs that apply to juvenile offenders are, sto energy credits, added to these two pioneers.
The center has 17 beds for men who met in legal action and semi-open regime and, in addition to the usual facilities of these centers, individual rooms and common spaces such as workshops, gardens and sports facilities, has a child visiting room and a park which held meetings between young offenders, sto credits, and their children.
Spaces are brightly colored toys, in which inmates can see their children in a more comfortable and enjoyable.
The parenting program includes a school in which parents are taught skills related to paternity and is individualized therapy with a psychologist.
For its part, the program for children who have shown violent behavior with their, cheap kinah, partner includes a general intervention, which provide solutions to educational disadvantage, other psychological and psychiatric if necessary, and a third group to improve the relationship skills children, the expression of emotions or the channeling of frustration.
This program provides supervision and guidance of the University Clinic of Psychology of the Complutense University of Madrid, which brings the experience of other institutions.
Granados has stressed that responsible parenthood program takes place in downtown Chicago and now successfully applied to men, and stressed that the low recidivism of juvenile offenders is even lower in cases of family violence, recurred in only 1% of the young.
One of the six young people who are currently in the middle Jose de las Heras explained to reporters that after a year and a half serving legal action in other centers that it seems better because it "looks more like a house or a villa and also has special facilities to meet with her seven months.
"It's better because it is less jailer, less closed," he explained, although he qualified that "at the end remains similar (to others) because they locked up."
This young man, who arrived in Madrid from Ecuador for nine years and is in the process of Spanish nationality will complete legal action within three months, hopes to find a plumber working through the training you received in the workshops of the centers children and live with your partner and your baby.
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