Journal article
Parole Officer Decision-Making Before Parole Revocation: Why Context Is Key When Delivering Correctional Services
Criminal justice policy review, v 33(3)
Apr 2022
Abstract
Back-end sentencing is the discretionary, administrative process through which individuals on parole are returned to prison for violating the requirements of their supervised release. Parole officers play a crucial role in this process as they are the witnesses to the rule-breaking behaviors of people on parole supervision and ultimately must initiate the back-end sentencing process. This study explores predictors of parole officer decision-making when determining whether to consider a person for revocation or to gear programmatic community-based resources toward them in an attempt to decrease the likelihood of their eventual revocation. Our results indicate that if people released to parole are front-loaded programmatic resources as a part of their release conditions from prison, the odds that parole officers subsequently gear community-based programs toward them decreases by approximately 60%. Other factors such as demographics, actuarial risk levels, and criminal history were not significantly predictive of officer decision-making in this context.
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3 citations in Scopus
Details
- Title
- Parole Officer Decision-Making Before Parole Revocation: Why Context Is Key When Delivering Correctional Services
- Creators
- Michael Ostermann - Rutgers, The State University of New JerseyJordan M. Hyatt - Drexel University
- Publication Details
- Criminal justice policy review, v 33(3)
- Publisher
- Sage
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Criminology and Justice Studies
- Scopus ID
- 2-s2.0-85112362142
- Other Identifier
- 991019173848504721