skip navigation
  • Account
    • Login
    • Manage
  • Subscribe
    • JUSTINFO
    • Register
  • Shopping Cart
  • Contact Us
    • Email
    • Feedback
    • Chat
    • Phone or Mail
  • Site Help
National Criminal Justice Reference Service
Office of Justice Programs header with links to bureaus/offices: BJA, BJS, NIJ, OJJDP, OVC, SMART Office of Justice Programs BJA BJS NIJ OJJDP OVC SMART Office of Justice Programs
Advanced Search  Search Help
    Browse By Topics  down arrow
  • A–Z Topics
  • Corrections
  • Courts
  • Crime
  • Crime Prevention
  • Drugs
  • Justice System
  • Juvenile Justice
  • Law Enforcement
  • Victims
CrimeSolutions
Add your conference to our Justice Events calendar
  • ABOUT NCJRS
  • OJP PUBLICATIONS
  • LIBRARY
  • SEARCH Q & A
  • GRANTS & FUNDING
  • JUSTICE EVENTS
Home / Library

LIBRARY

Abstract Database

Register for Latest Research

Stay Informed
Register with NCJRS to receive NCJRS's biweekly e-newsletter JUSTINFO and additional periodic emails from NCJRS and the NCJRS federal sponsors that highlight the latest research published or sponsored by the Office of Justice Programs.

NCJRS Abstract

To download this abstract, check the box next to the NCJ number then click the "Back To Search Results" link. Then, click the "Download" button on the Search Results page. Also see the Obtain Documents page for direction on how to access resources online, via mail, through interlibrary loans, or in a local library.

1 record(s) found

 

NCJ Number: 44280 Find in a Library
Title: RECIDIVISM - FRANCE
Journal: INSTANTANES CRIMINOLOGIQUES  Issue:29  Dated:(1976)  Pages:11-25
Author(s): E M FONTAINE
Date Published: 1976
Annotation: RESULTS OF TWO STUDIES CONDUCTED IN FRANCE WHICH REFUTE A RESEARCH FINDING THAT 56.1 PERCENT OF INCARCERATED CRIMINALS WILL BECOME RECIDIVISTS ARE REPORTED AND DISCUSSED.
Abstract: THE AUTHOR CONDUCTED A 1972 STUDY IN PONTOISE, FRANCE, INVOLVING TWO SAMPLES, THOSE WHO HAD RECEIVED A SUSPENDED SENTENCE AND THOSE WHO HAD SERVED A FULL PRISON TERM; HIS RESULTS SHOWED THAT 3 PERCENT OF THE FIRST GROUP AND 2.7 PERCENT OF THE SECOND GROUP BECAME RECIDIVISTS. THE PERCENTAGE INCREASED TO 27 PERCENT WHEN THE SAMPLE CONSISTED OF THOSE WHO RECEIVED A PROBATIONARY SUSPENSION ON TOP OF A SIMPLE SUSPENDED SENTENCE (I.E., THOSE WHO BECAME RECIDIVISTS WITHOUT EVER SERVING A PRISON TERM). HOWEVER, A 1972 STUDY BY THE CENTRE NATIONAL D'ETUDES ET DE RECHERCHES PENITENTIAIRES (CNERP: NATIONAL CENTER FOR PENITENTIARY STUDIES AND RESEARCH) CLAIMED A RECIDIVISM RATE OF 56.1 PERCENT FOR THOSE SERVING PRISON SENTENCES FOR THEIR CRIMES. THE AUTHOR OF THIS ARTICLE TAKES ISSUES WITH THE CNERP FINDING ON THE BASIS OF BOTH THE UNDERLYING CONCEPT OF RECIDIVISM AND THE METHODOLOGY OF THE STUDY. THE CNERP USED A RETURN TO PRISON WITHIN 10 YEARS OF THE DATE OF COMPLETING SENTENCE AS A DEFINITION OF RECIDIVISM AND MADE NO DISTINCTION BETWEEN FIRST OFFENDERS, RECIDIVISTS, AND MULTIRECIDIVISTS. THE FRENCH PENAL CODE, HOWEVER, VIEWS ONLY A 5-YEAR PERIOD AFTER INITIAL OFFENSE, CONSIDERS RECIDIVISM FOR CASES IN WHICH NO PRISON TERM IS SERVED, AND DISTINGUISHES BETWEEN THE THREE CLASSES OF OFFENDERS. BECAUSE THE CNERP COMBINED ALL THREE TYPES OF OFFENDERS IN ITS SAMPLE, THE AUTHOR OF THE ARTICLE DOES NOT CONSIDER THEIR SAMPLE REPRESENTATIVE AND POINTS OUT THAT, IF ONE MIXES FIRST OFFENDERS WHO PRACTICALLY NEVER BECOME RECIDIVISTS WITH RECIDIVISTS WHO PRACTICALLY ALWAYS RECIDIVATE, ONE INDIVIDUAL OUT OF TWO CAN BE SHOWN TO RETURN TO PRISON WITHIN 10 YEARS. THE AUTHOR'S SECOND STUDY SET OUT TO EXPLORE WHETHER THE PENAL CODE'S DISTINCTION BETWEEN OFFENDERS WAS VALID AND WHETHER THE SENTENCING INCREASES PROVIDED FOR RECIDIVISTS WERE JUSTIFIED. THE SAMPLE CONSISTED OF MOST CASES HEARD IN PARIS 'POLICE COURTS' (TRYING MISDEMEANORS AND PETTY OFFENSES) DURING THE WEEK OF NOVEMBER 22-28, 1965, WITH A 5-YEAR PERIOD SET FOR DETERMINING RECIDIVISM. VARIABLE ANALYSIS WAS PERFORMED FOR ALL THOSE WHO SERVED PRISON TERMS, AND FINDINGS FOR BOTH RECIDIVISTS AND FIRST OFFENDERS WHO DID NOT REPEAT WERE COMPILED. SIGNIFICANT CONCLUSIONS INCLUDED: (1) IN RELATION TO AGE, FIRST OFFENDERS WHO DO NOT BECOME RECIDIVISTS ARE DISTRIBUTED ALONG A NORMAL CURVE, IMPLYING THAT 'DELINQUENCY OF OCCASION' (NONREPEATED) IS NOT SPECIFICALLY JUVENILE IN NATURE; (2) THE MINIMUM PENALTY FORESEEN BY THE PENAL CODE OFFSETS THE PROPENSITY TO RECIDIVATE FOR MORE THAN 95 PERCENT OF FIRST OFFENDERS; (3) THE POPULATION OF HABITUAL OFFENDERS COMES INTO THE OPEN FOLLOWING A HALF-LIFE PERIOD OF 7 YEARS BEGINNING WITH 14.5 YEARS-OF-AGE, I.E., OVER THE COURSE OF 7 YEARS, HALF OF THOSE WHO WERE RECIDIVISTS WILL RECIDIVATE, ETC; AND (4) THE PROPENSITY TO RECIDIVATE AMONG HABITUAL OFFENDERS DIMINISHES BY 2 PERCENT PER YEAR BEGINNING WITH 14.5 YEARS-OF-AGE. THE AUTHOR FEELS THAT, AS FIRST OFFENDERS RARELY BECOME RECIDIVISTS, SUSPENDED SENTENCES SHOULD BECOME THE GENERAL RULE FOR THESE OFFENDERS AND ATTENTION SHOULD BE TURNED TO REPARATION OF DAMAGES TO THE VICTIM; HOWEVER, AS RECIDIVISTS OFTEN BECOME HABITUAL RECIDIVISTS, THE LAW SHOULD APPLY ALL OF THE FORCES WITHIN ITS POWER TO DISCOURAGE RECIDIVISM THROUGH REPRESSION AND STIFFER SENTENCES. FINDINGS ARE PRESENTED IN TABULAR AND GRAPHIC FORM. -- IN FRENCH.
Index Term(s): First time offenders; France; Habitual offenders; Incarceration; Recidivism; Studies
Sponsoring Agency: Association Francaise de Criminologie
75001 Paris, France
Corporate Author: Association Francaise de Criminologie
France
Page Count: 15
Format: Article
Type: Report (Study/Research)
Language: French
Country: France
To cite this abstract, use the following link:
http://www.ncjrs.gov/App/publications/abstract.aspx?ID=44280

*A link to the full-text document is provided whenever possible. For documents not available online, a link to the publisher's website is provided. Tell us how you use the NCJRS Library and Abstracts Database - send us your feedback.




Find in a Library

You have clicked Find in a Library. A title search of WorldCat, the world's largest library network, will start when you click "Continue." Here you will be able to learn if libraries in your community have the document you need. The results will open in a new browser and your NCJRS session will remain active for 30 minutes. Learn More.

You have selected:

This article appears in

In WorldCat, verify that the library you select has the specific journal volume and issue in which the article appears. Learn How.

Continue to WorldCat

You are about to access WorldCat, NCJRS takes no responsibility for and exercises no control over the WorldCat site.

 
Office of Justice Programs Facebook Page  Twitter Page
  • Bureau of Justice Assistance Facebook Page Twitter Page
  • Bureau of Justice Statistics Twitter Page
  • National Institute of Justice Facebook Page Twitter Page
  • Office for Victims of Crime Facebook Page Twitter Page
  • Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Facebook Page Twitter Page
  • Office of Sex Offender Sentencing, Monitoring, Apprehending, Registering, and Tracking Facebook Page Twitter Page
Contact Us | Feedback | Site Map
Freedom of Information Act | Privacy Statement | Legal Policies and Disclaimers
USA.gov | CrimeSolutions
Department of Justice | Office of Justice Programs