4.4 • 131 Ratings
🗓️ 3 April 2024
⏱️ 42 minutes
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The "goal" of incarceration varies depending on who you ask. Whether you consider prison fair retribution for engaging in criminal activity or an opportunity at redemption, most people agree that the punitive nature of the US criminal justice system neither rehabilitates nor curbs recidivism rates.
Emily Ruth invites Christine Marallen to share her extensive insight into the criminal justice rehabilitative process. Christine is a certified prison chaplain, and as the Chief Strategy Officer for Damascus, she created and facilitated the Damascus Trauma Reentry Program inside numerous correctional facilities around Ohio.
The pair also explore the link between incarcerated populations and those who score at intermediate or high risk on Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) evaluations, as well as the role that NARM plays in Christine's work.
About Christine Marallen:
Working with the incarcerated since 2002, Christine Marallen is the former Director of Prison Ministries for the Archdiocese of Cincinnati, a position she left in 2019 to further build Damascus—a non-profit reentry and staffing organization founded in 2015. As the Chief Strategy Officer for Damascus, Christine facilitates the Damascus Trauma Reentry Program inside numerous correctional facilities around Ohio—a curriculum she created after a decade talking with individuals who struggled to understand what drove their decisions that led them to incarceration.
Christine has lived throughout the U.S. while working with USA Today Newspaper in various sales and marketing management roles from 1988 to 2002. She holds a B.A. in English from Miami University, an M.S. in Criminal Justice, and an M.A. in Theology from Xavier University. She is a certified prison/jail chaplain, a member of the Cincinnati Enquirer Editorial Board, and past President of the American Catholic Correctional Chaplains Association. From 2006 to 2018, Christine taught Criminal Justice at Xavier University and has taken hundreds of undergraduate students into Ohio prisons to learn alongside incarcerated students in the Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program, based out of Temple University. Christine is a NARM-Informed Professional and excited to apply the model to the curriculum and work she does.
Christine currently resides in Cincinnati, Ohio. Her Damascus Trauma Reentry Curriculum can be facilitated in any correctional facility.
To read the full show notes and discover more resources, visit https://complextraumatrainingcenter.com/transformingtrauma
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View upcoming trainings:
https://complextraumatrainingcenter.com/schedule/
The Complex Trauma Training Center (CTTC) is a professional organization providing clinical training, education, consultation, and mentorship for psychotherapists and mental health professionals working with individuals and communities impacted by Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and Complex Trauma (C-PTSD).
CTTC provides NARM® Therapist and NARM® Master Therapist Training programs, as well as ongoing monthly groups in support of those learning NARM. CTTC offers a depth-oriented professional community for those seeking a supportive network of therapists focused on three levels of shared human experience: personal, interpersonal & transpersonal.
The Transforming Trauma podcast embodies the spirit of CTTC – best described by its three keywords: depth, connection, and heart - and offers guidance to those interested in effective, transformational trauma-informed care.
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0:00.0 | Welcome to the Transforming Trauma podcast. |
0:08.0 | Transforming Trauma is presented by the Complex Trauma Training Center. |
0:11.7 | I'm your host, Emily Ruth, and I'm so glad you've joined us today. |
0:16.1 | Hi, Transforming Trauma listeners. |
0:18.2 | If you're a mental health professional working with complex trauma |
0:21.1 | and are interested in learning the neuro-effective relational model, we're excited to share with you |
0:26.2 | about our upcoming NARM Therapist trainings. The NARM Therapist Training is an advanced clinical |
0:31.9 | training designed for licensed mental health professionals, current mental health graduate students, |
0:36.5 | and active clinical interns and trainees, where you will get trained in a comprehensive developmental framework |
0:41.8 | and clinical approach for resolving the long-term impacts of ACEs and CPTSD. |
0:47.1 | As you are learning and integrating NARM, you will receive individualized support from a team of |
0:52.2 | skilled, passionate, and supportive trainers led by |
0:55.2 | faculty members Brad Camer, Stephanie Klein, and Marsha Black. If you are working in the field of |
1:00.3 | complex trauma, we encourage you to register now to get trained in NARM. For more information |
1:05.6 | and to reserve your spot, please visit www.complextrauma training center.com. |
1:15.2 | And now for our interview. |
1:17.8 | Christine Morellan has worked with those experiencing incarceration since 2002. |
1:22.4 | She holds a Master of Science and Criminal Justice, a Master of Arts in Theology, and is a |
1:26.6 | certified prison chaplain. |
1:28.1 | She is the former director of prison ministries for the Archdiocese of Cincinnati, a position |
1:32.6 | she left in 2019 to further build Damascus, a non-profit re-entry and staffing organization founded |
1:38.4 | in 2015. As the chief strategy officer for Damascus, Christine created and facilitates the Damascus Trauma Reentry |
... |
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