Exam 7: The Effectiveness of Restorative Justice Practices
Exam 1: The Ethics of Community-Based Sanctions25 Questions
Exam 2: What Influences Offenders' Willingness to Serve Alternative Sanctions?20 Questions
Exam 3: When the Policy Becomes the Problem25 Questions
Exam 4: The Impact of Gender and Race-Ethnicity in the Pretrial Release Process27 Questions
Exam 5: State Administration of Drug Courts25 Questions
Exam 6: Restorative Practices in Instituttional Settings and at Release25 Questions
Exam 7: The Effectiveness of Restorative Justice Practices20 Questions
Exam 8: A Quasi-Experimental Evaluation of Thinking for a Change25 Questions
Exam 9: Offender Coercion in Treatment: A Meta-Analysis of Effectiveness25 Questions
Exam 10: The LSI-R and the COMPAS: 35 Questions
Exam 11: Can 14,737 Women Be Wrong?25 Questions
Select questions type
_______________ are non-confining residential facilities that are utilized as
Alternatives for adjudicated adults or juveniles who are not appropriate for probation and/or who need a period of readjustment after imprisonment.
Free
(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
B
_______________ boot camps were created as a short military-based program focused on military discipline, physical training, and manual labor.
Free
(Multiple Choice)
4.7/5
(40)
Correct Answer:
A
_______________ are programs that are designed to equip offenders with the opportunity to seek employment and/or maintain employment, while also engaging in educational or vocational training, as well as other treatment services that might be available at the facility.These programs are often used in replacement of jail sentences.These programs most often provide day and night supervision, job referral services, and counseling for residents.
Free
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(34)
Correct Answer:
D
According to McCollister, French, Inciardi, Butzin, Martin, and Hooper, the goal of the (Therapeutic Community) TC model for drug abuse treatment is _______________.
(Multiple Choice)
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Concurrently, federal spending on parole services has _______________ while parole officers' caseloads have _______________.
(Multiple Choice)
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With _______________, offenders are sentenced to a term of confinement
Only to be released after a set time and ordered to serve the remainder of their time on probation.The logic behind such action is that the offender will develop a natural dislike of incarceration and will seek to abstain from criminal behavior in hopes of avoiding such unpleasant incarceration.
(Multiple Choice)
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According to Duwe and Kerschner, boot camps were initially based on the premise that _______________ could jolt offenders into reforming their criminal ways.Moreover, by providing early release to program graduates, boot camps were also conceptualized as a means to help alleviate the problem of prison overcrowding.
(Multiple Choice)
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_______________ boot camps provide a combination of therapeuticprogramming, intensive supervision following release, and an aftercare services component.
(Multiple Choice)
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According to your textbook authors, the National Institute of Corrections has defined _______________ as "a range of sanctioning options that permit thecrafting of sentences to respond to the particular circumstances of the offender and the offense; and the outcomes desired in the case."
(Multiple Choice)
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According to Duwe and Kerschner, correctional boot camps first appeared in the United States in the early __________ in Oklahoma and Georgia.
(Multiple Choice)
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_______________ boot camps included a short military-based program focused on military discipline, physical training, and manual labor but also added a therapeutic programming component that focused on not only addressing individual issues such as anxiety, problem-solving, self-esteem, etc.but also included an intensive supervision component following release.
(Multiple Choice)
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According to Duwe and Kerschner, boot camps can, in theory, reduce prison bed space needs in the following way(s):
(Multiple Choice)
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_______________ theory states that crime is learned through associations with criminal definitions.Interacting with antisocial peers is a major cause of crime.Criminal behavior will be repeated and become chronic if it is reinforced.When criminal subcultures exist, many individuals can learn to
Commit crime in one location.
(Multiple Choice)
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A _______________ is typically designed to use some form of strict discipline with rehabilitative measures.
(Multiple Choice)
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According to your textbook authors, there are actions that administrators can take to increase the chances of success of intermediate sanctions in their jurisdictions.These include:
(Multiple Choice)
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_______________ are a type of facility that is designed primarily for first-time and/or property offenders.These offenders are required to pay victim restitution and/or provide community service as a means of fulfilling their sentence.
(Multiple Choice)
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_______________ are defined as residential facilities for offenders that are either nearing release from prison or are in the initial stages of return to the community.In addition, they also consist of residential facilities that are designed as an intermediate sentencing option prior to prison, typically being applicable to serious probationers.
(Multiple Choice)
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Typically, within residential facilities, staff will tend to play the following role(s):
(Multiple Choice)
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Intermediate sanctions may involve residential facilities like _______________
(Multiple Choice)
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_______________ is the short term of incarceration of an individual followed by a specified term of community supervision in hopes of deterring the offender from recidivating.These sentences usually range between 30 and 90 days with the judge reducing the original sentence and allowing the offender to be released into the community.
(Multiple Choice)
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