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What is smart sex offender policy

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TLDR
RCNLs are designed to raise awareness of sex offenders in the community so that individuals can protect themselves from victimization, and such awareness should in turn reduce the likelihood that the registered offenders will recidivate.
Abstract
InJuly 1994, 7-year-old Megan Kanka was raped and killed by a recidivist sex offender living across the street from her in Hamilton Township, NJ. The perpetrator, Jesse Timmendequas, had a history of sexually abusing children and lived with two other sex offenders; yet his neighbors were unaware of their criminal history. Because of Jesse’s anonymity, he lured Megan into his house to see his puppy. Megan’s parents said that if they had only known that sex offenders were living across the street from them, Megan would be alive today. They then advocated for notification of sex offenders’ whereabouts to become mandatory in all states, and many politicians were eager to support her and any legislation that could potentially protect children from sexual predators. As a result, the federal government and all states enacted their own versions of registration and community notification laws (RCNLs), which are known colloquially as “Megan’s Law.” During the last decade and a half, RCNLs have overcome legal challenges to be developed and expanded; now, RCNLs regulate the rights and movements of sex offenders living in the community. Like Megan’s Law, most of these policies are “memorial laws” based on the emotionally charged cases of a child being raped and/or killed by a stranger (Terry and Furlong, 2008). The goal of RCNLs are to raise awareness of sex offenders in the community so that individuals can protect themselves from victimization, and such awareness should in turn reduce the likelihood that the registered offenders will recidivate (Beck and Travis, 2006). But the laws were not based on a sound theoretical framework of crime prevention and control, and there are some fundamental flaws in the basis of this legislation. More than a dozen years after their implementation, empirical studies now show moderate, if any, effects of this legislation on either the recidivism levels of the offenders (Zgoba, Witt, Dalessandro, and Veysey, 2008) or the protective behaviors that they are

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Outcome Effect and Professional Skepticism

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors experimentally test a potential barrier to skepticism, finding that outcome knowledge biases supervisors' evaluations of auditors' skeptical behavior, and observe that auditors in the field anticipate that their superiors will be infl...
Journal ArticleDOI

The Outcome Effect and Professional Skepticism

TL;DR: In this article, the authors experimentally test a potential barrier to skepticism, finding that outcome knowledge biases supervisors' evaluations of auditors' skeptical behavior and that auditors in the field anticipate their superiors will be influenced by outcome knowledge when they evaluate their skeptical behavior.
Journal ArticleDOI

It Varies From State to State: An Examination of Sex Crime Laws Nationally

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify considerable variation in the type, intensity, and design of sex crime laws among states and suggest that considerable caution is warranted when generalizing from evaluations of particular laws, and that the continuing expansion of state-level policy making will make it increasingly difficult to identify the effects of specific policies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Perceptions of and support for sex offender policies: Testing Levenson, Brannon, Fortney, and Baker’s findings

TL;DR: Levenson, Brannon, Fortney, and Baker as mentioned in this paper reported that despite their limited instrumental impact, sex offender laws hold symbolic value to the public, and more research is needed to further understand demographic differences in perceptions of sex offender policies, and perhaps public education must precede an effective attempt at implementing evidence-based sex offender legislation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Shared Visual Attention Reduces Hindsight Bias

TL;DR: It is shown that a higher correlation between the gaze patterns of performers and evaluators (shared attention) is associated with lower hindsight bias, and this association was validated by a causal method for debiasing: Showing the gaze pattern of the performers to theevaluators as they viewed the stimuli reduced the extent of hindsight bias.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Characteristics of Persistent Sexual Offenders: A Meta-Analysis of Recidivism Studies.

TL;DR: A meta-analysis of 82 recidivist studies identified deviant sexual preferences and antisocial orientation as the major predictors of sexual recidivism for both adult and adolescent sexual offenders.
Book

Father-Daughter Incest

TL;DR: The incest taboo is universal in human culture as discussed by the authors and it is considered to be the foundation of all kinship structures, and it has been considered as the basic social contract in many cultures.
Book

The Secret Trauma: Incest in the Lives of Girls and Women

TL;DR: The Secret Trauma remains the definitive argument for the overwhelming prevalence of incestuous abuse as discussed by the authors, based on findings about San Francisco, the book makes a persuasive case for an epidemic of abuse on a national scale.
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