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Can Payment by Results measure desistance?
Viewpoints: Should smoking in prison be banned?
Cory Monteith: The heroin users who don't fit the 'junkie' stereotype
For young people, a criminal record should not be a life sentence
Plan for cheap prison work 'may cost thousands of jobs'
Why it's OK to give to homeless drug addicts
Youth custody is failing young people who want to change their ways
It's time to treat drug-addicted children as adults
Mark Johnson - Recovery: Championing Action for the Future
Why evicting families or cutting benefits won't cut youth crime
How to prevent riots: invest in young people, don't criminalise them
Reverting to 'tough' justice fails both adults and children
Long prison sentences fail not just offenders, but society too
This appetite for revenge against offenders will never cut crime
Prisoner rehabilitation can begin with a simple dressing gown
Employing ex-offenders is a result worth paying for
Will Westminster finally act on the experiences of young offenders?
The 10th anniversary of The Prince's Trust Young Achiever of the Year award
Individuals make up gangs – so rehabilitate them as such
Mark Johnson on the Channel 4 Street Weapons Commission
Apologising to victims will not reduce reoffending rates
Want to get ex-offenders into work? Scrap criminal records
Using ex-offenders is best way to engage with improving prisons
Where will this crowd-pleasing lead? The return of hanging?
Children who offend need our help – not our hatred
Where's the victim support for troubled perpetrators?
Drug users' voices must be heard in the battle against addiction
Children and Young People Now interview Mark Johnson
Rattling out prescriptions writes off addicts
Prisoners are ready for a taste of democracy
Teachers' TV Interview with Mark Johnson
It's people, not systems, that can make a real difference
Teenagers need the power to step off the trouble train
Ex-offenders should be our secret weapon, not outcasts
Young offenders need a future, not a stigma
Ex-criminals have a lot to say, now government must listen
