Ressources en psychocriminologie, psychologie forensique et criminologie
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TED Talks (2014) Daniel Reisel: The neuroscience of restorative justice

Daniel Reisel studies the brains of criminal psychopaths (and mice). And he asks a big question: Instead of warehousing these criminals, shouldn’t we be using what we know about the brain to help them rehabilitate? Put another way: If the brain can grow new neural pathways after an injury … could we help the brain re-grow morality? (Feb 2013)

Daniel Reisel grew up in Norway but settled in the UK in 1995. He works as a hospital doctor and as a research fellow in epigenetics at University College London. He completed his PhD in Neuroscience in 2005, investigating how learning rewires the brain. Since then, his research has been concerned with the effect of life events on gene function. Daniel is currently training to become an accredited restorative justice facilitator with the UK Restorative Justice Council.

Conférences extraites du colloque « La psychiatrie et la psychologie fondées sur des preuves ». Organisé par Franck Ramus et Tiziana Zalla de l’Institut d’Etude de la Cognition de l’Ecole normale supérieure.

En France, une partie de la psychiatrie et de la psychologie restent encore isolées 1) des progrès considérables des connaissances accumulés ces dernières décennies grâce aux sciences cognitives et aux neurosciences, 2) des meilleures pratiques cliniques développées au niveau international, et 3) de la culture de l’évaluation des traitements et des pratiques indispensable à leur amélioration. Si la psychiatrie biologique et pharmacologique de l’adulte échappe largement à cette critique, la pédopsychiatrie et le champ des psychothérapies souffrent d’un grand retard qui se rattrape d’autant plus difficilement que la formation universitaire des psychiatres et des psychologues reste très lacunaire dans ces domaines. Ce colloque a donc pour objectif de faire connaître les principes de la médecine fondée sur des preuves, l’apport des sciences cognitives et de l’approche scientifique de l’être humain, et leur indispensable application à la psychiatrie et la psychologie.

Simon Lambrey s’attache à l’historique de la médecine basée sur des preuves en donnant l’exemple de certains traitements et d’essais cliniques et Jérôme Sackur s’intéresse à savoir si la psychologie est une science de la nature (Biologie, Chimie…), auxquelles cas elle n’aurait pas besoin de preuves.

[videojs mp4= »http://savoirs.ens.fr/uploads/videos//diffusion/2013_04_06_sackurlambrey.mp4″ videojs poster= »http://poisson.ens.fr/logos/ens.jpg »]

Intervention audio: 

http://savoirs.ens.fr/uploads/sons/2013_04_06_sackurlambrey.mp3

Ecouter aussi la 1ere intervention: « Les limites de la psychologie et de la psychiatrie fondées sur des croyances »

http://savoirs.ens.fr/uploads/sons/2013_04_06_ramus.mp3

Découvrir l’intégralité du colloque La psychiatrie et la psychologie fondées sur des preuves 6 avr. 2013 Paris (France)

SCC (Mai 2012) Recherche: Prévision de la récidive au moyen de l’échelle ISR-R1 et d’une mesure de substitution

La prévision de la récidive est un travail complexe qui, de toute évidence, revêt une très grande importance au moment de la prise de décisions relatives aux différents types d’élargissement. Dans le cadre de ce travail d’évaluation, le SCC utilise l’Échelle révisée d’information statistique sur la récidive (Échelle ISR-R1). L’échelle, qui n’est utilisée que pour évaluer les délinquants non autochtones, permet d’établir la probabilité qu’un délinquant commette un acte criminel au cours des trois années suivant sa mise en liberté.

La présente étude vise à déterminer si, en dépit des changements au sein de la population carcérale, l’Échelle d’ISR-R1 demeure efficace au moment de prévoir la récidive. En outre, les auteurs se sont penchés sur la question de savoir si cette échelle de mesure permettait de prévoir la récidive violente et la récidive sexuelle. Enfin, ils ont examiné l’applicabilité éventuelle d’une mesure de substitution de l’échelle aux délinquants autochtones de sexe masculin et aux délinquantes autochtones et non autochtones.

http://www.csc-scc.gc.ca/005/008/092/005008-0281-fra.pdf

Voir aussi sur l’utilisation de l’ISR-R1 l’article: Utiliser le potentiel de réinsertion sociale évalué à l’admission pour déceler les meilleurs candidats à la mise en liberté (Larry Motiuk et Mark Nafekh, Direction de la recherche, Service correctionnel du Canada)

Lancement de la saison scientifique du CICC 2013-2014

Thème de cette année: « La violence et l’homicide à travers le temps et l’espace»

Programme

Mot de bienvenue
Maurice Cusson, Professeur émérite à l’École de criminologie
de l’Université de Montréal, chercheur au CICC

« A skeptic’s take on studying cross-national
homicide rates: Things are not always what
they seem »
William Alex Pridemore, Professor of Criminal Justice at
Georgia State University and editor of the International
Criminal Justice Review (American Society of Criminology)

«Nouveaux regards sur l’homicide en Europe»
Christophe Soullez, Directeur de L’Observatoire National
de la délinquance et des réponses pénales du INHESJ,
France

« Trends and patterns in lethal (armed) violence »
Anna Alvazzi del Frate, Director of research, Small Arms
Survey, Geneva Switzerland

«Premiers résultats de l’Enquête Mondiale sur
l’homicide»
Marc Ouimet, Professeur à l’École de criminologie de
l’Université de Montréal et chercheur au CICC

 Probation Service publishes second Recidivism Study (December 2013)

The Probation Service and Central Statistics Office (CSO) have established a partnership to conduct research on recidivism and related issues among offenders on supervision in the community. This second study report is based on anonymised offender and offence information on a 2008 cohort of offenders from the Probation Service supervision database. The study reports on recidivism within three years among that cohort using five years follow up of recorded crime and Court Service data held by the CSO. The study also examines variations in recidivism relating to type of original order, gender and age of the offender, category of original offence and of the subsequent offence.
This recidivism study provides a clear overview of community sanctions and their outcomes; informing the Service in the development and support of effective interventions in working to make our communities safer.
Key Findings

  • Almost 60% of offenders on Probation Service supervision had no conviction for a further offence committed within three years of the imposition of a Probation or Community Service order.
  • The overall recidivism rate of offenders in the study was 41% over a three year period.
  • There is a higher level of re-offending in the first year after the making of the supervision order in comparison with subsequent years within the 2008 cohort. The reduction between first and second year was more significant in the 2007 cohort.
  • The recidivism rate decreased as the offender age increased.
  • Male offenders represented 87% of the total population and had a higher recidivism rate than female offenders.
  • Public Order was the most common original offence.
  • The three most common offences for which offenders were reconvicted were the same as with the 2007 cohort: Public Order, Theft and Controlled Drugs Offences.

A copy of the report can be accessed by clicking here

 

TED (2013) Elizabeth Loftus: The fiction of memory (17′)

Une conférence de la psychologue américaine E. Loftus à propos du « false memory syndrome » qui a fait controverse dans les années 90, à savoir la création de faux souvenirs en particulier ceux « induits » lors de certaines formes de thérapies qui font appel à ce travail de la mémoire, qui par essence est un travail de « falsification » …

Psychologist Elizabeth Loftus studies memories. More precisely, she studies false memories, when people either remember things that didn’t happen or remember them differently from the way they really were. It’s more common than you might think, and Loftus shares some startling stories and statistics, and raises some important ethical questions we should all remember to consider.

Memory-manipulation expert Elizabeth Loftus explains how our memories might not be what they seem — and how implanted memories can have real-life repercussions

Sur le même sujet, voir aussi la passionnante conférence de : Scott Fraser (2012) Pourquoi les témoins oculaires se trompent

Re-offending by offenders on Community Orders: Preliminary findings from the Offender Management Community Cohort Study

The Offender Management Community Cohort Study (OMCCS) is a longitudinal cohort study of adult offenders who started Community Orders between October 2009 and December 2010.

This report summarises preliminary findings from the Offender Management Community Cohort Study (OMCCS) on levels of re-offending among offenders who received Community Orders. It looks at the factors associated with re-offending including offenders’ needs, attitudes and their relationship with their Offender Manager. The findings presented here are provisional and are based on incomplete re-offending data. The figures may change once the analysis is finalised.

EXTRAIT:

Attitudes of offenders

Emerging findings suggest that offenders with more with pro-criminal attitudes and more negative attitudes towards their sentence were more likely to re-offend.

  • More than half (59%) of offenders who had the most pro-criminal attitudes (those that made them susceptible to offending) re-offended compared with 21% of those with the least pro-criminal attitudes.
  • 44% of offenders who ‘disagreed’ or ‘strongly disagreed’ that their sentence was mainly a punishment re-offended compared with 27% of those who ‘strongly agreed’.

omccs-summary

Voir également, à partir des résultats de cette recherche, le commentaire très éclairant sur la démarche évaluative à l’anglaise que fait Russell Webster :

Relationships and ongoing assessment are key to reducing reoffending (Russell Webster, 08/2013)

Assessment is a continuous process

The authors found that Offender Managers used the formal assessment process (OASys) to target those more at risk of reoffending and to manage and plan sentences but that they also appeared to exercise their professional judgement to either prioritise among formally identified risks or identify other risks not captured by formal assessment.

This pragmatic approach was judged to be an appropriate response to the complex needs of offenders, although it was also determined by the availability of local services. The two needs most frequently addressed in sentence plans were substance misuse and accommodation.

Interestingly, the authors noted that assessment of some needs (particularly “Attitudes” and education and training) tended to be more accurate later in the community sentence, when the Offender Manager had developed a relationship with the person they were supervising.

Similarly, offenders’ feedback on their Community Order was particularly positive when they perceived that the Offender Manager understood their needs.

There seem to be two key lessons to be drawn from this research for those planning new models of service delivery:

  1. There will be dangers if the Community Rehabilitation Companies rely overmuch on the initial assessment of needs conducted by a probation officer in the Public Sector Probation Service. Needs inevitably change over time and a more in-depth assessment can be developed over time with the active involvement of the service user.
  2. Positive relationships are key to successful Community Orders.

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