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INTRO. TO CORRECTIONS

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INTRO. TO CORRECTIONS Chapter 1 The Goals of Corrections Policy – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: INTRO. TO CORRECTIONS


1
INTRO. TO CORRECTIONS
  • Chapter 1
  • The Goals of Corrections
  • Policy

2
Corrections
  • The term used to describe a set of agencies
    created to control the behavior of people accused
    or convicted of a criminal offense.

3
Social Control
  • Any set of methods designed to encourage people
    to obey norms
  • Crime control is only one area of social control.
  • Informal social controls
  • CRJ system is the last resort

4
Correctional Agencies
  • Four types
  • Jails
  • Prisons
  • Probation
  • Parole

5
Efficiency and Fairness
  • Long struggle for society
  • Efficiency concerns focus on how to keep society
    safe at the lowest cost
  • Fairness is a fundamental value that is basic to
    our morality and sense of justice

6
Defining the study of corrections
  • Content- Four agencies
  • Context- Politics
  • Goals- Efficient Crime control, low
  • recidivism, Public Safety
  • Fair and thorough treatment for
  • each person and case

7
Never extremely efficient
  • Democratic values stress fair and equal treatment
    over efficient social control
  • Social control- Informal
  • CRJ System designed for occasional
    failures of family and community
  • Democracies- Not guilty unless proven

8
BURDEN OF PROOF
  • Criminal- Beyond a reasonable doubt
  • Civil- Preponderance of the evidence

9
PROBABLE CAUSE
  • Arrest Warrant- A reasonable person would agree
    that a crime has or will be committed and the
    person to be arrested committed the crime
  • Search Warrant- A reasonable person would agree
    that a crime has or will be committed and
    evidence will be found in the place to be searched

10
Corrections has little control
  • Police and prosecutors decide on offenders
  • Legislatures set rules for courts
  • Executive Branch appoints policymakers
  • Correctional systems then handle offenders

11
Legislative Control
  • Design sentencing structures for the courts
  • Describe each agencys legal powers and duties
  • Setting the state agencys budget

12
Defining Modern Goals
  • Control and punish offenders
  • Attempts to change offenders behavior are
    secondary
  • Control makes the public feel safer
  • Punishment appeals to current sense of
  • values
  • Reform is more cost effective

13
PUNISHMENT
  • Inflict a penalty for wrongdoing by deliberately
    causing someone to experience pain

14
DO NOT THINK LIKE AN INMATE
  • Sometimes punishment changes behavior
  • Usually offender resents punishment and results
    in bitterness toward those felt to be responsible
  • People act on the basis of their own perceptions
    rather than on the basis of what society perceives

15
DISCIPLINE
  • Training designed to assure obedience to a set of
    rules
  • Instills self control that assures law-abiding
    behavior
  • Creates long term thinking and appreciate the
    needs of others

16
Honesty and Respect
  • Honesty is crucial to self-discipline
  • Respect is most easily achieved when loyalty and
    warmth toward the source of the rules are the
    dominant emotions
  • HARD to be warm and respectful to that which is
    the source of inflicted pain
  • Parental discipline

17
OFFENDERS VIEW
  • Government is the oppressor that denies their
    dignity and freedom
  • Principle of least eligibility

18
MORAL AND UTILITARIAN VIEWS
  • Moral arguments focus on the search for fairness
    and try to compensate for the wrongs done by
    crime
  • Utilitarian arguments focus on the practical goal
    of reducing crime while spending as little as
    possible

19
Moral/ Utilitarian Goals
  • Moral- Efficiency is of secondary concern-
    primary goal is fairness- Pay for the crime
  • Utilitarian- Look to the future safety of
    citizens and the costs of corrections action

20
PHILOSOPHIES OF PUNISHMENT
  • 1. RETRIBUTION
  • JUST DESERTS
  • 2. DETERRENCE
  • 3. REHABILITATION
  • BOUNDARY SETTING
  • RESTITUTION
  • TREATMENT/ REINTEGRATION
  • 4. INCAPACITATION

21
RETRIBUTION
  • Infliction of pain that is equal to or slightly
    greater than the harm than that done to the
    victim
  • Vengeance or legalized revenge

22
JUST DESERTS
  • Punishment should be used to assure a sense of
    fairness
  • Stresses social justice rather than revenge
  • Emphasis is on punishment certainty and
    consistency
  • Focused on societys sense of fairness rather
    than the status of victim or offender

23
DETERRENCE
  • Threat of punishment to influence how people make
    decisions
  • Attempt to minimize crime by influencing
    rational, conscious choices

24
Effective deterrence
  • Certain
  • Swift
  • Severe
  • Maximum effect is achieved when most criminals
    are quickly caught and punished
  • Offenders perception/ not objective reality

25
Deterrence/ RetributionAssumptions
  • 1. Crime results from a rational calculation of
    the expected costs and benefits of various acts
  • 2. This calculation can be affected by legal
    penalties
  • Offenders believe that others will be caught
    rather than themselves

26
Offender mentality
  • Present orientation of persons thinking causes
    resistance to deterrence
  • Common criminal state of mind
  • Criminals think they have Street Smarts

27
Two types of Deterrence
  • General deterrence punishes one offender in an
    effort to discourage others from committing
    crimes
  • Specific deterrence suggests that punishing a
    particular offender will discourage that
    individual from committing crimes in the future

28
BOUNDARY SETTING
  • Societies have always defined some behavior as
    criminal
  • Members of society cannot feel united as we
    unless there is a readily identified they
  • By defining actions as criminal the group sets
    itself apart from others

29
RESTITUTION
  • Repays the victim for material and financial
    losses
  • State Victims compensation
  • Used to punish minor crimes
  • Community service

30
INCAPACITATION
  • Prevents re-offending by making the offender
    physically unable to commit other crimes
  • Primarily by imprisonment
  • Warehouses offenders until age and/or deterrence
    discourages re-offending
  • Surest means of safeguarding society

31
Legal Approaches to Incapacitation
  • Habitual offender laws
  • Three-strikes laws
  • Life without parole

32
Prediction Problems
  • Presumption that repeat offenders can be
    predicted
  • Few offenders commit most crimes
  • Some types of offenders are more likely
  • Gross increase in imprisonment with little or no
    effect on crime

33
Treatment- Reintegration
  • Correctional treatment is an attempt to convert
    offenders into law abiding citizens
  • Most treatment advocates believe that crime
    occurs because of some sort of mental, spiritual,
    educational, or vocational inadequacy of the
    offender
  • Correct the inadequacy/ crime ceases?
  • Crime is a symptom of individuals problem

34
Treatment vs. Retribution
  • Offends many citizens sense of justice
  • If crime is a result of social organization or
    inequalities, then society has the responsibility
    to help re-integrate offenders
  • Ignoring Free will is also problematic
  • May help change habits, lifestyle, and changeable
    personality traits

35
Correctional Decision Making
  • Justice Model
  • Scientific or medical model

36
Justice Model
  • Started in 1700s
  • Basis of US Constitution
  • Deterrence basis
  • Regained popularity late 1970s
  • Current trend is justice

37
Scientific Approach
  • Courts should judge each offender as a unique
    individual
  • Can stress culpability, dangerousness, treatment
    needs, or other factors
  • Some are less able to avoid crime
  • Questions that crime is by free will
  • Supporters note that most will return to society

38
Indeterminate Sentencing
  • Broad range of sentence
  • Part may be in custody and part may be in
    community supervision
  • Based upon dangerousness and treatment needs of
    the criminal rather than the type of offense
  • Originally designed to make offenders work for
    release- Good time

39
The Legal Approach
  • Based upon the Justice Model
  • Laws should be used to cause people to make
    desirable choices by using punishment to deter
    crime
  • The seriousness of crime is the only relevant
    factor
  • Seriousness is defined in terms of offenders
    blameworthiness and harm

40
Determinate Sentences
  • Penalties are determined solely by the persons
    crime and prior record
  • Penalty may be in a range of years

41
Mandatory Sentencing
  • Judges have no discretion
  • Sentences set when offender is convicted
  • Legislature sets sentences
  • Most cannot be suspended

42
Presumptive Sentences
  • Federal system used since 1987
  • Sentences set by a presidentially appointed panel
    of judges
  • Set based upon average of older sentences

43
Basis of Ranges
  • 1. Seriousness of the offense
  • 2. Salient factors in criminal history that
    predict recidivism
  • Determination of ranges by research
  • Race and economic factors illegal
  • Variations must be explained by judges

44
Truth in Sentencing Laws
  • Mostly used with violent offenders
  • Most require to serve 50 of sentence
  • Some require two thirds of sentence
  • Economics are the problem

45
Justice Model Impact
  • Mandatory, presumptive, and determinate sentences
    are all attempts to assure equality in sentencing
  • Treatment is not considered
  • Punishment fits the crime
  • Average violent offender 85 months paroled in 50
    months or less

46
Impact- Continued
  • Justice model advocates believe that longer
    sentences are responsible for the drop in crime
    in the mid 1990s
  • Others credit numbers of young people, improved
    economic opportunities, better policing methods,
    greater community cooperation, and tougher gun
    laws- (I disagree completely with the gun laws)

47
Contradictions
  • Different sentencing develops out of different
    justifications for punishment
  • Polls indicate that treatment is favored
  • Deterrence, incapacitation, and retribution all
    favor punishment rather than treatment
  • Conflicts with treatment and reintegration
  • Most fundamental contradiction

48
Summary
  • Punishment drives offenders out
  • Treatment pulls them back into society
  • Retribution reduces offender status
  • Deprives in some way
  • Reintegration requires improvement
  • Least eligibility
  • Treatment helps offenders no recidivism
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