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Corrections

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Corrections Carrying out the sentence of the decreed by the judicial system History of Corrections Community Corrections Intermediate Sanctions Institutional Corrections – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Corrections


1
Corrections
  • Carrying out the sentence of the decreed by the
    judicial system
  • History of Corrections
  • Community Corrections
  • Intermediate Sanctions
  • Institutional Corrections

2
Colonial America (1600s-1750s)
  • Punishment was public
  • Punishment was corporal or capital
  • Prison-like institutions existed, but were not
    used as punishment

3
COPORAL PUNISHMENTS
4
The Rise of the Penitentiary (1750-1800)
  • William Penn
  • Revised criminal code in Pennsylvania to forbid
    torture and mutilation ordered new houses of
    correction
  • Walnut Street Prison (1790)
  • Other states (New Jersey, New York) followed

5
Walnut Street Jail and Eastern Penitentiary
6
Pennsylvania vs. Auburn System
  • Pennsylvania
  • Western Penitentiary, Eastern Penitentiary
  • Silent System
  • New York
  • Auburn Prison
  • Congregate System
  • Only difference?
  • Isolation of inmates during the day

7
Corrections in the 1800s
  • Auburn System wins debate
  • Easier to perform labor the only way to perform
    factory labor
  • But, prison brutal, corporal punishment prevalent
  • Prison building boom (1850s)
  • Prison Industry
  • Contract system, convict-lease, state account

8
The Progressive Era through 1960s
  • Weve already talked about the progressives
  • 1920s
  • Attacked many social ills (working conditions,
    poverty.)
  • In Criminal Justice
  • Rehabilitation (not punishment, penance) should
    be the goal of corrections
  • Psychology/Sociology Causes
  • Platform of indeterminate sentences, probation,
    parole

9
Corrections from 1970 to present
  • Faith in rehabilitation crushed
  • Liberals justice model Conservatives punish
  • 1970s deterrence
  • 1980s-present deterrence/incapacitation
  • Return to determinate sentencing
  • 3 strikes legislation, mandatory minimums, harsh
    sentencing guidelines
  • Chain gangs, strip-down prisons

10
Conscience and Convenience
  • Why were the first prison built?
  • Revulsion of Gallows ? Penitentiaries
  • Then, Correctional Facilities
  • Why do we still build prisons if we no longer
    believe in rehabilitation?
  • Incapacitation as the default goal of
    prisons.or convenience

11
The Corrections Continuum
  • Probation
  • Intermediate Sanctions
  • Jails
  • Prisons

12
Probation
  • Father of Probation is John Augustus
  • Formally adopted in progressive era
  • Suspend sentence, in return, offender abides by
    conditions of probation
  • Conditions set and enforced by judicial system
  • Offenders who fail may have probation revoked,
    and original sentence imposed

13
Functions of Probation Departments
  • Pre-sentence Investigation (PSI)
  • Interview offender, case history, tied to
    rehabilitation
  • Includes recommendation for sentence
  • Supervision of Offenders
  • Counseling, meet with offenders
  • Help with job, broker community resources
  • Supervise (house visits, drug testing)

14
Use of Probation
  • Almost 2/3 of the total corrections population is
    on probation
  • Roughly 4 million offenders are on probation
  • Average Caseload 120
  • Goal has shifted
  • Rehabilitation to supervision/zero tolerance

15
Parole
  • Parole as release from prison
  • Discretionary release
  • Parole board appointed by governor
  • Rehabilitation and intermediate sentences
  • Parole as supervision
  • Similar to probation supervision
  • Early release a privilege, therefore must follow
    conditions of release

16
Abolish Parole?
  • Typically, states move to abolish discretionary
    parole release
  • When this is done, post release supervision is
    still part of the process

17
How effective are probation and parole
supervision?
  • Cost savings
  • Probation and parole are much less expensive than
    prison
  • Recidivism
  • Large differences in recidivism across
    jurisdictions
  • As high as 65 (California felons), as low as 25
    (Huntsville, TX)
  • Depends upon risk of clients

18
Intermediate Sanctions
  • Probation Prison Death
  • ISP EM Boot Camp

19
WHY do these critters exist?
  • Prison crowding in 1980s
  • Probation viewed as failure
  • Need for continuum of sanctions

20
What is the goal of these critters?
  • Divert offenders from prison (save money)
  • Reduce recidivism (through deterrence)
  • Provide an option to judges that fits between
    prison and probation

21
Intensive Probation or Parole Supervision (IPS)
  • Idea is to soup up traditional supervision
  • Reduce Caseloads (15 to 40 offenders)
  • Daily contact with offender
  • Routine drug testing
  • Curfews, home and employment visits

22
Do ISPs work?
  • Do ISPs divert from prison?
  • NO, judges are reluctant to send prison-bound
    offenders to ISP (Net Widening)
  • Do ISPs reduce recidivism?
  • NO, when compared to similar group of offenders,
    they actually do worse (fishbowl effect)

23
Shock Incarceration (boot camps)
  • Short, intense incarceration to shock the
    offender into his/her senses
  • military drill and discipline, physical exercise,
    hard physical labor
  • typically reserved for young, non-violent,
    first-time offenders
  • short time-span, typically 6 months

24
Do boot camps work?
  • Reduce Recidivism?
  • NO, boot camp graduates have similar recidivism
    rates as offenders who receive different
    sanctions
  • Divert Offenders?
  • Possible, but not likely
  • Depends upon where in the system they are
    diverted

25
Home Confinement and Electronic Monitoring
  • Home confinement is an old practice
  • Electronic Monitoring is used to enforce home
    confinement
  • Technology emerged in the 1980s
  • Most are bracelets that work like invisible dog
    fences
  • Tell probation/parole officers whether or not a
    person has broken curfew

26
Residential Community Corrections
  • Traditional Half-way house
  • Used to reintegrate prison inmates into society
  • Now
  • Traditional functions
  • Sanction for probation violators
  • Day reporting centers
  • Split sentences (probation RCC time)

27
How do RCCs Work?
  • Typically, they are house-like structures (not
    prison-like)
  • Inmates (clients) are usually free to leave
    during the day (job, classes)
  • Return at night
  • Most RCCs are privately run

28
Evidence for Cost Savings and Diversion
  • In order to divert and save , demonstrate that
    the offender wouldve went to prison if not for
    the intermediate sanction
  • Most programs demonstrate net widening
  • Exception--if correctional personnel make
    decision.

29
Evidence for Recidivism
  • None of these sanctions have demonstrated
    recidivism reductions.
  • Why not? All of them are based on the principle
    of specific deterrence. Example of boot
    camp--why would this reduce recidivism?
  • Exception some incorporate intervention
    programs grounded in good theory

30
Evidence for Providing a Continuum
  • This is the sole Victory for intermediate
    sanctions
  • Offenders report that ISP is more painful than
    traditional probation, and some suggest it is
    worse than prison
  • Is this enough to justify intermediate sanctions?

31
Why are these Critters thriving?
  • Provide Continuum
  • Politically Powerful
  • Boot camp residents with shaved heads, saluting.
  • Public wants harsh punishments
  • Myth of effectiveness

32
Institutional Corrections
  • Go to jail, go directly to jail, do not pass go,
    do not collect 200

33
JAILS
  • County Level Institutions
  • Usually run by Sheriff and deputies
  • House inmates (less than 1 year) and pre-trial
    detainees
  • Conditions notoriously poor
  • Little programming, no medical facilities
  • Violence, shifting population, suicide rates high

34
Prisons
  • Hold individuals sentence to at least 1 year
  • Operated by the executive branch
  • Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP)
  • 98 Facilities
  • 126,000 inmates
  • Most inmates (60) are serving time for drug
    offense
  • Prisons ranked on a 1 to 6 scale (1 FCI in
    Colorado)

35
State Prisons
  • Over 500 prisons, and 1.2 million offenders
  • Governor typically appoints warden
  • Organization
  • Maximum (razor wire, guard towers)
  • Medium (similar to max, but less serious
    offenders)
  • Minimum (typically campus style)

36
Since the late 1970s, the total number of inmates
in custody has increased dramatically
37
Not simply because the population increased
38
The War on Drugs and the BOP
39
Why the dramatic increase?
  • Change in public opinion, and political emphasis
  • Three strikes laws, truth in sentencing
  • Longer sentences in guidelines
  • Drug Policies
  • Increase in felony convictions
  • Factors that do not clearly influence
    incarceration
  • Crime rates, Economy

40
Profile of Prison and Jail Inmates
  • Racial Profile
  • 35 White, 44 Black, 11, Hispanic
  • 11 of black males in 20s and 30s
  • Most (98) are male
  • Most are poor, with less than a high school
    education
  • Majority (60) have been in prison before

41
What type of offenders go to prison?
42
Does (did) Incapacitation work?
  • Yes and No
  • Yes small to moderate reductions in crime
    levels for certain offenses (burglary, theft,
    robbery).
  • Doubling the prison population (200,000 to
    400,000) reduced these crimes by 18 over a
    decade
  • But, doubling again, will have less of an
    effect!!
  • NO Little if any effect on murder, rape, simple
    or aggravated assault.
  • Zero effect on drug crimes (replacement)
  • Does it work as wrong question

43
The Pains of Imprisonment
  • Gresham Sykes
  • Material possessions
  • Heterosexual relationships
  • Security
  • Autonomy
  • Deprivation model vs. Importation model
  • Does old inmate code still exist? Not really

44
The Inmate Economy
  • A black market exists in almost all prisons
  • Sex, drugs, alcohol, food, better living
    conditions
  • What is the currency of the prison
    economy?CIGARETTES
  • Why not stamp out the prison economy?
  • Guards are pragmatic
  • Some guards are part of the economy

45
Prison Gangs
  • Similar to the outside, gangs are divided along
    racial lines
  • Roughly 6 of inmates identify with a gang
  • Gangs control economy, rackets
  • Primary concern is gang violence, and the
    possibility of riots

46
Womens Issues
  • Typically single prison per state
  • Get less resources
  • More difficult to visit
  • Pregnancy, motherhood
  • Where do children go if mothers are locked up?

47
Does Rehabilitation Work?
  • Martinson (1975) nothing works
  • He later recanted his position, and argued that
    some things do work, but nobody listened
  • Don Andrews (Canadian Psychologist)
  • Much rehabilitation is correctional quackery
  • What works?
  • Cognitive/Behavioral based programs
  • Intensive intervention with follow-ups
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