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Journal ArticleDOI

A new methodology for assessing the level of risk in incarcerated offenders

D. A. Clark, +2 more
- 01 Jul 1993 - 
- Vol. 33, Iss: 3, pp 436-448
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TLDR
A review of the literature relating to the assessment of risk in incarcerated offenders is given in this paper, where a new methodology for the actuarial assess of risk based on the prediction of the way in which offending behaviour traits will be manifest in the prison environment is described.
Abstract
A review of the literature relating to the assessment of risk in incarcerated offenders is given. A new methodology for the actuarial assessment of risk based on the prediction of the way in which offending behaviour traits will be manifest in the prison environment is described. A validation of this methodology is described giving a level of accuracy of 65 per cent. A measure of the accuracy, the rated percentage agreement (RPA), is described and the inter-rater reliability of the methodology is investigated. The utility of the instrument in a prison environment is outlined and implications for future refinement and validation are discussed. A long-standing problem for the criminal justice system has been how to assess accurately the risk of re-offending for long-term prisoners, serving indeterminate sentences, convicted of serious offences. The fact that the vast majority of these offenders will eventually be released, and the desire effectively to integrate them into the community, must be balanced against the need to protect the public from the risk of further serious offences. Proposed changes introduced by the 1991 Criminal Justice Act, the decision by the European Courts regarding the right of discretionary lifers to challenge their continued incarceration, and the advent of more open reporting within the English prison system have brought the criteria and methods used to establish risk under close scrutiny. 'It is widely acknowledged that past behaviour is the best predictor of future behaviour,' write Owens and Schoenfeldt (1979). This statement is demonstrably true for criminal behaviour, where virtually all major reviewers (Cornish and Clarke 1975; Farrington and West 1990; Andrews 1983; Hill 1985) have concluded that the best predictor of recidivism is the type and frequency of previous convictions. This finding applies across all ages, offence types, and cultures, and is quite in keeping with current psychological theories. However, when attempting to assess risk of re-offending among a group of serious offenders serving long sentences, several problems are encountered. One problem is that of base rate; the frequency of serious criminal offences (i.e. serious violent or sexual assaults) is fairly low even in such a population. Thus, predicting from past behaviour, one would expect very few of these offenders to re-offend. Unfortun ately, the consequences of a second similar offence are too great for one to accept this general prediction. A second difficulty is that data available at the beginning of sentence do not change over time. So, although one might compute sufficiently accurate actuarial parole risk scales for offenders (Andrews 1983), the level of risk suggested by such tools cannot change over time. Therefore a prisoner assessed with this pre-conviction data is judged to be equally at risk of re-offending the day after sentence and twenty years later. It is possible that this might well be the case, but it

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Citations
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Offender risk assessment: Guidelines for selection and use.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present significant developments in the area of offender assessment during the past 20 years and this knowledge has placed the field in a position to construct guidelines as to how to conduct offender assessment.
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Soft power in prison: Implications for staff–prisoner relationships, liberty and legitimacy:

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss how these relationships are forged by the terms of "neo-paternalism", focusing in particular on what is labelled "soft power" and describe some of the impediments that hinder the development of closer relationships between prisoners and uniformed staff.
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Managing mentally ill inmates in prisons

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BookDOI

Offence paralleling behaviour: A case formulation approach to offender assessment and intervention.

TL;DR: In this paper, the application of OPB to assessment and treatment of criminal behaviour is discussed. But the authors focus on the assessment of the OPB and its application to the treatment of violent offenders.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the psychology of prediction

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the rules that determine intuitive predictions and judgments of confidence and contrast these rules to the normative principles of statistical prediction and show that people do not appear to follow the calculus of chance or the statistical theory of prediction.
Book

Personality and Assessment

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the acquired meaning of stimuli and on the situation as perceived, viewing the individual as a cognitive-affective being who construes, interprets, and transforms the stimulus in a dynamic reciprocal interaction with the social world.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical versus actuarial judgment

TL;DR: Research comparing these two approaches to decision-making shows the actuarial method to be superior, factors underlying the greater accuracy of actuarial methods, sources of resistance to the scientific findings, and the benefits of increased reliance on actuarial approaches are discussed.
Book

Crime and Personality

TL;DR: Eysenck et al. as discussed by the authors have shown that there are three major higher order factors, which they call emotional stability, emotional independence, and introversion, which are related to personality.
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