Assignment title: Information
Message : 1) Explain evidence-based practices and their goal. What is missing when looking at what is considered an evidence-based practice? How does net-widening factor into evaluating whether or not a program is effective? 2)Analyze what it means to reduce recidivism according to the varying definitions of recidivism. What types of variables need to be considered when determining whether or not a program or treatment reduces recidivism? 3)Analyze the cost of incarceration versus the costs of utilizing community corrections for offenders. What makes community corrections a more appealing option?
Unit Lesson
As we begin this course in probation and parole, it is important to first take a look at the criminal justice
system as a whole and where the use of community supervision (i.e., probation and parole) fits into the
system. Consider the criminal justice system to be a pendulum of changing legislation and ideology that
always aims to reach the same goals of reducing recidivism (when an offender returns to the criminal justice
system for a new crime, is convicted of a new crime, or is returned to prison or jail) and preventing crime. In
other words, the criminal justice system wants to decrease the number of new people entering the system for
a criminal offense, and it also wants to reduce the number of people reentering the criminal justice system
after they have already been punished for committing a criminal offense. The pendulum swings based upon
various things that include the public's perception of how big a problem crime is in society; how well
lawmakers believe the current legislation is working to reduce crime; and how the media portrays how well the
criminal justice system is doing to prevent crime, punish criminals, and rehabilitate those who need help.
Each of these factors work with, and sometimes against, one another to shape what the criminal justice
system does. This is important to recognize because sometimes the pendulum swings more towards the
punitive, or punishment, side, and sometimes it swings towards the rehabilitative side.
As you will see when you study the history of probation and parole, the criminal justice system in the United
States started with the goals of punishment, deterrence, and incapacitation. Once it was largely accepted that
the ways in which we dealt with criminals bordered on cruel and excessive, our country adopted the medical
model for treating offenders, which you will learn more about in Chapter 3. Essentially, our criminal justice
system went from punishing the offenders to attempting to "cure" them of their criminal behavior. Over time,
and due to a variety of reasons, the pendulum again swung to the punitive side. Concepts like three-strikes
laws, determinate sentencing, and sentencing enhancement all emerged from the get tough on crime
mentality that took hold in this nation in the 1970s. While on paper we are still a nation that wants to get tough
on crime, as evidenced by our legislation, a new way of working with offenders has emerged in the past
twenty years that has incorporated the concepts of punishment, deterrence, and incapacitation with the idea
that offenders can change their behavior if they have the ability to learn new ways of thinking, and they can be
rehabilitated and provide restitution to their victims and the community.
BCJ 3150, Probation and Parole 1
This blended way of working with offenders can be seen most in community corrections—probation and
parole. The concepts of probation and parole in and of themselves are punitive in nature. The offender is
punished because he or she now has a criminal record, must pay fines or supervision fees, and must report to
see a probation or parole officer for supervision. Offenders can also be incapacitated because probation
officers can use sanctions like periodic imprisonment, such as weekends in jail for technical (rule) violations of
probation. Parole officers can likewise return a parolee to the department of corrections for a technical (rule)
violation. The specific and general deterrence goal of sentencing can also be met in the community
corrections setting, especially for low-risk offenders. Sometimes even the act of being sentenced to probation
is enough for some offenders to never commit another crime. Probation and parole have the ability to provide
more rehabilitative programs to offenders because oftentimes the offenders are helping to subsidize the cost
of these programs in exchange for being afforded the ability to reside in the community while serving their
sentence. Prisons and jails are at a disadvantage when it comes to being able to offer rehabilitative
programing because they are funded almost entirely with taxpayer dollars and cannot justify spending extra
monies on programming. In addition, it is much easier for probation and parole to enforce restitution through
community service or payment of money to the victim because the offender is allowed to be out in the
community, working and earning money to pay the victim, or out in the community doing volunteer work to
benefit the community as a whole.
There are some really exciting concepts that have emerged in the past twenty years in community corrections
as a result of the need to reduce the prison and jail populations to save money and to reduce recidivism in the
offender population. These "evidence-based practices – correctional programs and techniques shown through
systematically evaluated research studies to be most effective with offenders," utilize a lot of psychology
principles like cognitive-behavior therapy, reality therapy, and psychoanalytic theory to work with offenders,
changing their thinking and behavior (Alarid, 2015, p. 17). Some of these concepts include motivational
interviewing, which you will study in more detail in this course, and the Thinking For A Change program,
which was developed for the National Institute of Corrections for use in every correctional setting (prison, jail,
probation, and parole). You can view the entire Thinking For A Change curriculum at
http://static.nicic.gov/Library/025057/default.html.
Another concept is restorative justice, also called balanced and restorative justice, which really focuses on
repairing the harm caused to the victim and community by an offender while at the same time restoring the
offender to a good place within the community. As we will see later in this course, the more invested an
individual is in his or her community, the less likely he or she is to commit an offense that would harm the
community or a member of the community.
Evidence-based practices also involve being able to accurately assess the offender for both risk of recidivism
and needs within the offender's life that contribute to his or her criminal behavior. These accurate
assessments are important at all stages of the criminal justice process, but become crucial when working with
an offender on probation or parole because that is where, most likely, he or she will spend the most time and
have access to the most resources. For example, while incarcerated in prison, it is definitely important to
accurately assess an inmate for risk so that he or she can be placed in the appropriate security-level facility.
However, as previously stated, those in prison do not have access to many rehabilitative programs; therefore,
probation and parole officers need to know what empirically-tested tools to use in order to have an accurate
picture of their clients' risk and needs. This is called the risk/need/responsivity principle, and it involves
assessing criminogenic needs in order to refer the offender to programs that will address those needs and
thereby reduce recidivism. For example, if a probation officer is able to accurately assess that an offender's
lack of education, employment, and social support are the main causes of his criminal behavior, that
probation officer can use motivational interviewing to help the offender see that his peer group is negatively
influencing him, and the probation officer can refer him to job training programs that will help him learn skills
necessary to obtain a good job.
The last thing to keep in mind as we study probation and parole is the challenges that the criminal justice
system faces in regards to legislation and how that impacts the evidence-based practices that criminal justice
professionals are implementing. While public opinion and criminal justice policy may be swinging on the
pendulum towards rehabilitation, our legislation is very much still swinging towards the get tough on crime,
lock 'em up and throw away the key mentality that prevailed from the 1970s until the early 2000s. The fact is
that the majority of the general public is in favor of reducing the overall prison population because not only will
it save taxpayer money, but also because most of the general public is in favor of seeing non-violent
offenders, such as property-crime offenders or drug offenders, get help for their criminal behavior rather than
go to jail or prison. The challenge in these coming years is to help align legislation with public opinion and
BCJ 3150, Probation and Parole 2
criminal justice programming, and along with that comes the task of increasing public buy-in for crime
prevention programs to help change potential offender thinking and behavior before that person enters the
system. As we go through this course, keep in the back of your mind how legislation and policy/ideology do
not quite line up, and how that can present issues in the present-day administration of probation and parole.
Reference
Alarid, L. F. (2015). Community-based corrections (10th ed.). Belmont, CA: Cengage Learning.
Suggested Reading
The following articles can be found in the CSU Online Library by accessing the ProQuest Criminal Justice
database. If you have any questions, the librarians' contact information can be found on the right side of the
library page.
This article discusses the ways in which a probation department is incorporating an offender's family in the
probation process.
Dizerega, M. (2011). San Francisco's family-focused probation: A conversation with Chief Adult Probation
Officer Wendy Still. Federal Sentencing Reporter, 24(1), 54-56. Retrieved from
http://search.proquest.com/criminaljusticeperiodicals/docview/897046898/fulltextPDF/F8948002ADD7
4FD8PQ/1?accountid=33337
This article details the basic tenets of restorative justice, the barriers to implementation, and how the juvenile
justice system would benefit from the use of restorative justice techniques.
Tsui, J. C. (2014). Breaking free of the prison paradigm: Integrating restorative justice techniques into
Chicago's juvenile justice system. Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology, 104(3), 635-666. Retrieved
from