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Transcendental Meditation and Offender Rehabilitation:
A New Approach to Crime Prevention

Introduction

In September 2003, the Journal of Offender Rehabilitation devoted all four issues of its annual publication to a special volume entitled “Transcendental Meditation in Criminal Rehabilitation and Crime Prevention” (J Offender Rehab 36 (1-4), 2003). This special volume presents a wide range of research showing that the practice of Transcendental Meditation can significantly reduce crime, criminal aggression, violence, recidivism, terrorism, and even international conflict, while simultaneously developing higher levels of psychological functioning—higher states of consciousness—in TM practitioners (see article titles and abstracts below).

The Journal of Offender Rehabilitation is one of the nation’s leading academic journals for research on rehabilitation programs and their impact on prisoners and substance abusers. This special volume was conceived by Dr. Charles Alexander, guest editor and late Institute Senior Fellow and Chair of the Psychology Department at Maharishi International University. Dr. Alexander’s groundbreaking doctoral work at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution in Walpole, Mass., served as the foundation for the project.

The volume begins with a brief review of the teachings and theories of both Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and Dr. Alexander about higher states of human consciousness beyond waking, dreaming, and sleeping. It then presents Dr. Alexander’s research on growth of these higher states in prisoners through the practice of TM.

The volume reviews past work on the use of the TM program in rehabilitation, both for prisoners and for substance abusers, and includes two articles on the reduction of recidivism through the TM program. It reviews evidence that crime and criminal aggression are linked to stress-induced abnormalities in the nervous system. It also summarizes two broad-based rehabilitation projects using the TM program—the Enlightened Sentencing Project in St. Louis and the Senegal prison project, in which TM was introduced into a national prison system—and considers possible cost savings from teaching TM to prisoners and prison personnel.

The section on prevention reviews innovative educational approaches utilizing the TM program, including an overview of Consciousness-Based education and the psychological results from projects in the Netherlands Antilles. Also included are research studies on the social impact of large peace-creating groups practicing TM together, including results showing reduced terrorism and international conflict.

Taken together, these articles present a powerful and comprehensive overview of the impact of the TM program on education, crime prevention, adult growth, and the creation of lasting world peace.

Transcendental Meditation in Crime Prevention
and Criminal Rehabilitation

Contents

Contributors
Preface
Acknowledgments
Foreword
In Memoriam: Charles N. Alexander, PhD, 1950-1998

 
INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW
    The Transcendental Meditation Program: A Consciousness-Based Developmental Technology for Rehabilitation and Crime Prevention
 
SECTION I: THEORY AND REVIEW
  Effectiveness of the Transcendental Meditation Program in Criminal Rehabilitation and Substance Abuse Recovery: A Review of the Research
  Effects of the Transcendental Meditation Program on Neuroendocrine Abnormalities Associated with Aggression and Crime
 
SECTION II: ORIGINAL RESEARCH ON REHABILITATION
  First Prison Study Using the Transcendental Meditation Program: La Tuna Federal Penitentiary, 1971
  Walpole Study of the Transcendental Meditation Program in Maximum Security Prisoners I: Cross-Sectional Differences in Development and Psychopathology
  Walpole Study of the Transcendental Meditation Program in Maximum Security Prisoners II: Longitudinal Study of Development and Psychopathology
  Walpole Study of the Transcendental Meditation Program in Maximum Security Prisoners III: Reduced Recidivism
  Effects of the Transcendental Meditation Program on Recidivism Among Former Inmates of Folsom Prison: Survival Analysis of 15-Year Follow-Up Data
  Consciousness-Based Rehabilitation of Inmates in the Netherlands Antilles: Psychosocial and Cognitive Changes
 
SECTION III: PREVENTING CRIME AND VIOLENCE
  Attacking Crime at Its Source: Consciousness-Based Education in the Prevention of Violence and Antisocial Behavior
  Preventing Crime Through the Maharishi Effect
  Preventing Terrorism and International Conflict: Effects of Large Assemblies of Participants in the Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi Programs
 
SECTION IV: Transcendental Meditation IN PRISONS AND PRISON SYSTEMS
  The Transcendental Meditation Program in the Senegalese Penitentiary System
  Cost Savings from Teaching the Transcendental Meditation Program in Prisons
 

REFERENCES
Index