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Christine S. Scott-Hayward

Bio: Christine S. Scott-Hayward is an academic researcher from California State University, Long Beach. The author has contributed to research in topics: Criminal justice & Economic Justice. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 15 publications receiving 79 citations. Previous affiliations of Christine S. Scott-Hayward include California State University & New York University.

Papers
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Posted Content
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the connections between adolescent psychological development, police interrogation and the juvenile false confession phenomenon and argue that in order to minimize juvenile false confessions, states should ensure adequate comprehension of the Miranda warnings, change the police procedures for interrogating juveniles, and videotape all interrogations.
Abstract: This paper looks at the connections between adolescent psychological development, police interrogation and the juvenile false confession phenomenon. It examines the psychological research on adolescent development and the impact this development can have on an adolescent’s decision to waive his or her Miranda rights and on his or her ability to withstand the techniques used by police to obtain confessions. The paper argues that in order to minimize juvenile false confessions, states should 1) ensure adequate comprehension of the Miranda warnings, 2) change the police procedures for interrogating juveniles, and 3) videotape all interrogations.

18 citations

01 Jan 2007
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the connections between adolescent psychological development, police interrogation and the juvenile false confession phenomenon and argue that in order to minimize juvenile false confessions, states should ensure adequate comprehension of the Miranda warnings, change the police procedures for interrogating juveniles, and videotape all interrogations.
Abstract: This paper looks at the connections between adolescent psychological development, police interrogation and the juvenile false confession phenomenon. It examines the psychological research on adolescent development and the impact this development can have on an adolescent’s decision to waive his or her Miranda rights and on his or her ability to withstand the techniques used by police to obtain confessions. The paper argues that in order to minimize juvenile false confessions, states should 1) ensure adequate comprehension of the Miranda warnings, 2) change the police procedures for interrogating juveniles, and 3) videotape all interrogations.

12 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of parole on reentry and challenge the dominant governmental approach to post-release reentry is analyzed. But, they conclude that parole fails at both of these goals and in fact can sometimes hinder the reentry process.
Abstract: In this paper, I analyze the effect of parole on reentry and challenge the dominant governmental approach to post-release reentry. One of the features of current reentry policy is that many states rely on their parole or post-prison supervision agencies to provide post-release reentry services. In the paper, I argue that the changing nature of parole supervision over the last forty years, specifically the shift from a casework approach to a surveillance approach, should lead policymakers to rethink this approach. Relying on interviews I conducted with people on parole in New York City as well as prior research on parole outcomes, I examine the effect of parole on reentry. Jeremy Travis has argued that reentry has two goals — promoting public safety and promoting reintegration of former prisoners. I conclude that parole fails at both of these goals and in fact can sometimes hinder the reentry process. Accordingly, I argue that parole agencies should not be providing post-release reentry services and suggest an alternative approach for states to consider. In particular, I suggest that reentry outcomes could be improved by separating the surveillance and monitoring aspects of parole from its reentry aspects.

10 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine pretrial judicial decision making, specifically the decision to impose bail, and find that bail schedules are the most important factor considered by judges and that bail is usually set without regard to the ability of the defendant to pay.
Abstract: This paper examines pretrial judicial decision making, specifically the decision to impose bail. At the bail hearing, judges must decide whether defendants should be detained, released on their own recognizance, or granted bail. In California, judges make this decision largely by relying on County Bail Schedules, which are similar to sentencing guidelines and prioritize the seriousness of the charged offense when determining bail. Being detained pretrial, either due to the denial of bail or the inability to afford the bail that was set has negative implications, including the fact that defendants who are denied bail are more likely to plead guilty, and upon conviction are more likely to be sentenced to incarceration. They also face longer sentences than defendants who are released pending trial. Despite the significant impact of the bail decision, there is limited research on the decision, including on the factors judges consider in making the bail decision and how judges make the decision. This paper presents the results of a qualitative study of bail hearings in two California counties.Relying on court observations and interviews, it finds that bail schedules are the most important factor considered by judges and that bail is usually set without regard to the ability of the defendant to pay.

8 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: In this article, the author describes the difficulty of going out and getting a job when released from prison: "When I first came home, I was nervous. I didn't know what I was doing or which road to take."
Abstract: “When I first came home, I was nervous. I didn’t know what I was doing or which road to take. And then [parole] want[s] me to do all these programs, all these appointments and all this other stuff . . . . It makes it even harder for one to be able to go out and get a job. You know when you have to be at an appointment at eight in the morning and they keep you there ’til eleven; then you know, you got a job interview at nine but parole is telling you, this is first, you can’t do nothing about it.”—Paul

7 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the institutional structure of parole boards, how much release discretion they are given, the substantive grounds for release decisions, the use of risk assessments in the decisional process, decision-making tools such as parole release guidelines, the requirements of fair and reliable procedures, victims' rights at parole hearings, the need for parole supervision in some but not all cases, the intensity of parole conditions, and the length of parole supervision.
Abstract: American parole boards have played a critical role in the formulation and administration of states’ prison policies in recent decades—and could play an equally important part in helping end mass incarceration. Long neglected by academic, research, and policy communities, systems of discretionary prison release are in need of improvement, if not “reinvention.” A plan for revitalization of parole release should lay out a comprehensive and aspirational model for the future. It must address the institutional structure of parole boards, how much release discretion they are given, the substantive grounds for release decisions, the use of risk assessments in the decisional process, decision-making tools such as parole release guidelines, the requirements of fair and reliable procedures, victims’ rights at parole hearings, the need for parole supervision in some but not all cases, the intensity of parole conditions, and the length of parole supervision.

48 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results of three surveys, two of them population-based survey experiments, were conducted during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada that compare public servant and citizen attitudes to various cutting-edge digital surveillance tools that can be used in the public sector to monitor employee work patterns, often targeted toward remote working conditions as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: As public sector work environments continue to embrace the digital governance revolution, questions of work surveillance practices and its relationship to performance management continue to evolve, but even more dramatically in the contemporary period of many public servants being forced to shift to remote work from home in response to the COVID‐19 pandemic This article presents the results of three surveys, two of them population‐based survey experiments, all conducted during the onset of the COVID‐19 pandemic in Canada that compare public servant (n = 346) and citizen (n = 1,008 phone;n = 2,001 web) attitudes to various cutting‐edge—though no doubt controversial among some—digital surveillance tools that can be used in the public sector to monitor employee work patterns, often targeted toward remote working conditions The findings represent data that can help governments and public service associations navigate difficult questions of reasonable privacy intrusions in an increasing digitally connected workforce Evidence for PracticeNew work surveillance technologies are available to use within the public sector and will present acceptability challenges to public managers as they contemplate the introduction of these technologies Multimodal survey data from Canada reveals that public servants and citizens find these emerging work surveillance technologies to be quite intrusive and unreasonable but show relatively more tolerance for digital surveillance over physical surveillance practices Understanding surveillance anxieties among targeted employees will be key to finding a balance between employee privacy rights and employer desires to manage employees in a remote or digital environment

32 citations

01 Jan 2017
TL;DR: This dissertation examines the challenges and contradictions as well as the expectations and aspirations involved in the provision of healthcare to inmates in a maximum-security prison in Pennsylvania, and argues that incarcerated men themselves are cast as “wards of the state” – the biological and financial property of thestate placed in its custody.
Abstract: In this dissertation, I examine the challenges and contradictions as well as the expectations and aspirations involved in the provision of healthcare to inmates in a maximum-security prison in Pennsylvania. In 1976, the Supreme Court granted inmates a constitutional right to healthcare based on the notion that a failure to do so would constitute “cruel and unusual punishment.” Drawing on two years of ethnographic fieldwork from 2014-2016 in the prison’s medical unit with inmates, healthcare providers, and correctional staff, I demonstrate how the legal infrastructure built around this right to healthcare operates in practice and the myriad effects it has for those in state custody. Through traversing the scales of legal doctrine, privatized managed care, and collective historical memory, bringing these structural components to life in personal narratives and clinical interactions, I advance the notion that the physical space of the prison’s medical unit is a “ward of the state” – a space of care where the state itself is “made” through interactions among individuals who relay and enact the legal regulations on inmate healthcare. I also argue that incarcerated men themselves are cast as “wards of the state” – the biological and financial property of the state placed in its custody. As such, the state has an obligation to care for inmates as quasi-citizens who are granted a right to healthcare in the setting of rights deprivation as punishment. Even though this right primarily exists as a mandate not to inflict too much harm, it also creates the conditions for which inmates come to rely on the state for life-saving and life-sustaining services, perpetuating historical forms of racial subjugation through care and containment in the process. Finally, I outline the paths inmates make for themselves to find meaning amidst the multitude of losses they experience and to seek belonging amidst disenfranchisement. While the forms of legal, personal, and political recognition that are available to inmates are few, the structural features of an institutionalized right to healthcare open up spaces for them to envision futures and to make both personal and structural appeals to justice with both tragic and hopeful consequences. Degree Type Dissertation Degree Name Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) Graduate Group Anthropology First Advisor Philippe Bourgois

28 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: P Phelps as mentioned in this paper argues that the most common form of criminal justice supervision is not imprisonment but probation, and its just as true for juveniles as for adults. But instead, it often serves as a netwidener, expanding formal supervision to low-level cases.
Abstract: Summary:The United States' high incarceration rate gets a lot of attention from scholars, policy makers, and the public. Yet, writes Michelle Phelps, the most common form of criminal justice supervision is not imprisonment but probation—and thats just as true for juveniles as for adults.Probation was originally promoted as an alternative to imprisonment that would spare promising individuals from the ravages of institutionalization, Phelps writes. But instead, it often serves as a net-widener, expanding formal supervision to low-level cases. Like mass incarceration, she demonstrates, mass probation is marked by deep racial and class disparities, and it can have devastating consequences for poor and minority communities.In her review, Phelps covers three aspects of probation supervision—who is sentenced to probation, what they experience, and when and why probation is revoked (that is, when probationers are sent to jail or prison for violating the terms of supervision). She then presents policy recommendations for each of these three stages that could reduce the harms of mass probation. They include scaling back the use of probation, offering probationers more meaningful help to improve their lives, and raising the bar for revoking probation. Though probation reform may not be a cure-all, she writes, it could reduce the scale of our criminal justice system and temper its detrimental effects.

25 citations

Dissertation
09 Jul 2019
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a Lay Summary, Declaration, and Acknowledgements, and acknowledgements of the authors. But they do not discuss the authorship of their work.
Abstract: ............................................................................................2 Lay Summary.......................................................................................4 Declaration..........................................................................................5 Acknowledgements................................................................................6

24 citations