Summarizing Rand's Study of Adult Felony Probation

Summarizing Rand's Study of Adult Felony Probation
Author: Joan Petersilia
Publisher:
Total Pages: 19
Release: 1985
Genre: Probation
ISBN:

The general topic of the research--probation--may not at first be in the mainstream of criminal justice thinking, where selective incapacitation and career criminals have occupied most of our policy attention. The topic was covered in the following topics: first, what distinguishes felons granted probation from those sentenced to prison, when both offenders have been convicted of the same crime? Second, are the courts consistent in the way they make the prison/probation decision? Third, how well do felons granted probation actually behave in the community? Fifth, how accurately can statistical models, based on detailed offender and offense information, predict which felons will succeed and fail on probation? And, finally, if these results suggest that felony probation poses unacceptable public safety risks, are there any more promising alternatives? The format is slide/text.

Granting Felons Probation

Granting Felons Probation
Author: Joan Petersilia
Publisher:
Total Pages: 140
Release: 1985
Genre: Social Science
ISBN:

This study represents the first systematic research on felony probationers. It is based on data on individuals convicted of selected serious felonies in Superior Court in California, who would have been likely candidates for prison. It defines probation and reviews its history to the present; documents the recidivism behavior of a selected sample of probationers and the implications for public safety; analyzes the factors that influence the prison/probation decision, the consistency of their application, and the recidivism of offenders with low, moderate, and high probabilities of imprisonment; identifies the factors associated with recidivism; discusses intermediate punishment--intensive community-based surveillance--as a sentencing alternative; describes operational programs; and develops a sentencing process to establish which alternative is appropriate for a given offender. Some of the conclusions suggested by the research are (1) felons granted probation present a serious threat to public safety; (2) the factors specified by law as appropriate considerations in the prison/probation decision strongly influence that decision in practice and should be used more consistently; (3) given the information now routinely provided to the court, the ability to predict which felons will succeed on probation cannot be vastly improved; and (4) state criminal justice systems should develop punitive community-based alternatives to prison for convicted felons.