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. 2013;35(1-2):51-80.
doi: 10.1111/lapo.12002.

The Paradox of Probation: Community Supervision in the Age of Mass Incarceration

The Paradox of Probation: Community Supervision in the Age of Mass Incarceration

Michelle S Phelps. Law Policy. 2013.

Abstract

After four decades of steady growth, U.S. states' prison populations finally appear to be declining, driven by a range of sentencing and policy reforms. One of the most popular reform suggestions is to expand probation supervision in lieu of incarceration. However, the classic socio-legal literature suggests that expansions of probation instead widen the net of penal control and lead to higher incarceration rates. This article reconsiders probation in the era of mass incarceration, providing the first comprehensive evaluation of the role of probation in the build-up of the criminal justice system. The results suggest that probation was not the primary driver of mass incarceration in most states, nor is it likely to be a simple panacea to mass incarceration. Rather, probation serves both capacities, acting as an alternative and as a net-widener, to varying degrees across time and place. Moving beyond the question of diversion versus net widening, this article presents a new theoretical model of the probation-prison link that examines the mechanisms underlying this dynamic. Using regression models and case studies, I analyze how states can modify the relationship between probation and imprisonment by changing sentencing outcomes and the practices of probation supervision. When combined with other key efforts, reforms to probation can be part of the movement to reverse mass incarceration.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Probation and Incarceration Supervision Totals Relative to Index Crimes, 1998-2010
Figure 2
Figure 2. Box-Plots of State Variation in Incarceration Rate Growth By Growth in Probation Rate and Decade
NOTE:Percent increases in supervision rates control for increases in crime rates.

References

    1. American Civil Liberties Union . Smart Reform Is Possible: States Reducing Incarceration Rates and Costs While Protecting Communities. ACLU; New York: 2011.
    1. Austin Adrienne. Criminal Justice Trends: Key Legislative Changes in Sentencing Policy, 2001–2010. Vera Institute of Justice; New York, NY: 2010.
    1. Austin James. Making Imprisonment Unprofitable. Criminology & Public Policy. 2011;10:629–35.
    1. Austin James, Krisberg Barry. Wider, Stronger, and Different Nets: The Dialectics of Criminal Justice Reform. Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency. 1981;18:165–96.
    1. Barker Vanessa. The Politics of Imprisonment. Oxford Univ. Press; New York: 2009.

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