Parole
Comparative Longitudinal Analysis of Recidivism Trajectories and Collateral Consequences for Sex and Non-Sex Offenders Released Since the Implementation of Sex Offender Registration and Community Notification
California Study Looks at Factors Leading to Parole Revocation
Community Reintegration Among Prisoners With Child Support Obligations: An Examination of Debt, Needs, and Service Receipt
Split Sentencing in Georgia: A Test of Two Empirical Assumptions
Back-End Sentencing and Reimprisonment: Individual, Organizational, and Community Predictors of Parole Sanctioning Decisions
Experimental Comparison of Telepsychiatry and Conventional Psychiatry for Parolees
Crime in Emerging Adulthood
Supervision Intensity and Parole Outcomes: A Competing Risks Approach to Criminal and Technical Parole Violations
Evaluating Intensive Supervision Probation/Parole (ISP) for Drug Offenders
Supervision Regimes, Risk, and Official Reactions to Parolee Deviance
An Impact Assessment of Machine Learning Risk Forecasts on Parole Board Decisions and Recidivism
Drug Testing for Youthful Offenders on Parole: An Experimental Evaluation
Parole Violations and Revocations in California: Analysis and Suggestions for Action
Unintended Effects of Penal Reform: African American Presence, Incarceration, and the Abolition of Discretionary Parole in the United States
Determinate Sentencing and Abolishing Parole: The Long-Term Impacts on Prisons and Crime
Examining the Effects of Community-Based Sanctions on Offender Recidivism
Halfway Houses and Parole - A National Assessment
Polygraph Plays a Key Role as a Containment Tool for Convicted Sex Offenders in the Community
Field Search: Field-Based Computer Forensics Software Widens Its Scope
Specialized Smartphones Could Keep Released Offenders on Track for Successful Reentry
NIJ Journal Issue No. 249
Less Prison, More Police, Less Crime: How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy
Professor Lawrence Sherman explains how policing can prevent far more crimes than prison per dollar spent. His analysis of the cost-effectiveness of prison compared to policing suggests that states can cut their total budgets for justice and reduce crime by reallocating their spending on crime: less prison, more police.
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Going Home (or Not): How Residential Change Might Help the Formerly Incarcerated Stay Out of Prison
Dr. Kirk discusses how Hurricane Katrina affected those formerly incarcerated persons originally from New Orleans and their likelihood of returning to prison. Kirk also discussed potential strategies for fostering residential change among those who were incarcerated, focusing specifically on parole residency policies and the provision of public housing vouchers.
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Changing the Behavior of Drug-Involved Offenders: Supervision That Works
A small number of those who commit crimes are heavily involved in drugs commit a large portion of the crime in this country. An evaluation of a "smart supervision" effort in Hawaii that uses swift and certain sanctioning showed that individuals committing crimes who are heavily involved in drug use can indeed change their behavior when the supervision is properly implemented.
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