11 research outputs found
Preventing crime in cooperation with the mental health care profession
Although major mental disorders do not have a central position in many criminological theories, there seems to be an evident relationship between these disorders and criminal behavior. In daily practice police officers and mental health care workers work jointly to prevent nuisance and crime and to keep the city livable. Examining the situations where the criminal justice system and mental health institutes are jointly involved to prevent crime, some pitfalls emerge that seem to threaten successful cooperation. There appear to be unrealistic expectations of the possibility to reduce the risk of reoffending by means of treatment and of the possibility to predict which offender poses a risk to society. Another complexity is the fact that both parties work from different backgrounds and pursue different goals. The way society and the criminal justice system deal with persons who are assumed to be a risk to the community because of a mental disorder demands a further investigation from a criminological perspective
Comparing the effects of community service and short-term imprisonment on recidivism: a matched samples approach
This study uses longitudinal official record data on adult offenders in The
Netherlands (n=4,246) to compare recidivism after community service to that after
short-term imprisonment. To account for possible bias due to selection of offenders
into these types of sanctions, we control for a large set of confounding variables
using a combined method of ‘matching by variable’ and ‘propensity score
matching’. Our findings demonstrate that offenders recidivate significantly less after
having performed community service compared to after having been imprisoned.
This finding holds for both the short- and long-term. Furthermore, using the
Rosenbaum bounds method, we show that the results are robust for hidden bias.