custodial sentencing and recividism#

Cards (7)

  • custodial sentencing
    • court requires offender to be held in prison or other closed community (psychiatric hospital)
  • aims of custodial sentencing
    • protect public (incapacitation)
    • punish offender and prevent recidivism - behaviourist approach
    • deter others - social learning, vicarious reinforcement
    • retribution - sense of justice, offender pays for the crime
    • rehabilitation - education or therapy
  • psychological effects
    • de-inviduation - SPE, loss of individual identity
    • depression - hopelessness
    • self harm - conformity, inmate culture
    • suicide - young men in first 24hrs most at risk
    • overcrowding and lack of privacy - 25%, stress, physical illness
    • effects on family - financially and psychologically affected
  • effectiveness of punishment is low
    high rates of recidivism
    • behaviourist principles - punishment most effective when immediate (not the case for custodial sentencing)
    • offender may see as punishment for getting caught not crime
    • not lower crime where death penalty
    may not be most effective method
  • prison as a training ground for crime
    Sutherland's Differential Association theory
    • spending time w criminals affects attitudes to crime
    • learn how to commit crime
    • placing low risk (recidivism) with high risk offenders makes it more likely that low risk will reoffend
    reinforces pro criminal attitudes
  • individual differences in recidivism
    custodial sentencing may be better for some than others
    • length of sentence made little diff to habitual offenders
    • differs with age and crime - younger more likely to reoffend, theft 2x more likely to reoffend than drug/sexual offenders
    suggests sentencing should be targeted in different ways
  • benefits of non-custodial sentencing
    alternatives may be better due to cost/problems
    • eg. probation, fines, community service
    • offenders sentenced to community rehabilitation less likely to reoffend (maybe because less serious offences)
    • would avoid problems like deinviduation, inmate culture
    maybe better for new or non violent offenders