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Targeting Employment Patterns to Reduce Offender Risk and Need

NCJ Number
161095
Journal
Forum on Corrections Research Volume: 8 Issue: 1 Dated: January 1996 Pages: 22-24
Author(s)
L. Motiuk
Date Published
January 1996
Length
3 pages
Annotation
This study illustrates the value of targeting offender employment as a major risk and need factor throughout Canada's correctional process and demonstrates this practice can lead to more effective and efficient offender case management.
Abstract
The study sought to identify offender employment status at the time of arrest, analyze offender employment needs on admission to prison, and monitor offender employment patterns while under community supervision. Data were collected using the Statistical Information on Recidivism Scale, the Level of Supervision Inventory, and the Community Risk/Needs Management Scale. Study findings revealed a consistent pattern in the distribution of conditional release failures and employment need levels; the greater the offender employment need, the more likely the offender was to fail on conditional release. Most employment variables were significantly associated with prison misconduct, return to prison, and parole violations. It is recommended that correctional systems produce meaningful and accurate offender profiles in order to raise awareness about institutional and community supervision populations and to assemble basic statistics on overall offender risk/need levels and specific offender needs. 8 footnotes and 4 tables