Ressources en psychocriminologie, psychologie forensique et criminologie
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Michelle S. Phelps (2013) The Paradox of Probation: Community Supervision in the Age of Mass Incarceration Law & Policy, Volume 35, Issue 1-2, pages 51–80, January-April 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.

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/lapo.12002/pdf

Martin Killias, André Kuhn, Marcelo F Aebi (2012) Précis de criminologie (f. d. Schweiz)

Parution de l’excellent manuel suisse de criminologie (600 pages !)… Avis aux amateurs!

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Ce texte introductif offre une synthèse de l’évolution de la criminalité sur les deux derniers siècles. Il expose les principes des recherches empiriques sur le crime et la réaction sociale et résume les connaissances sur bon nombre de thèmes d’actualité. La criminalité a-t-elle réellement augmenté? Pourquoi les jeunes sont-ils plus souvent impliqués dans la délinquance? Combien de femmes sont-elles victimes de violences? Quel sont les taux de récidive? Quelle est l’utilité des peines? Des peines dites « alternatives » seraient-elles plus efficaces que la prison?

Toutes ces questions sont abordées à la lumière de l’état des connaissances au niveau international. La nouvelle édition – entièrement remaniée, désormais par trois auteurs – offre au lecteur une synthèse des recherches publiées ces dernières années en Suisse et à l’étranger. Etudiants, praticiens et journalistes y trouveront un aperçu des connaissances en matière de violence, de criminalité et de prévention.

Acheter le livre sur ABEbooks.fr (110€)

Ecouter l’interview d’André Kuhn (2011) , Professeur de criminologie et de droit pénal aux Universités de Lausanne et de Neuchâtel, sur la criminologie.

FRANCE INTER ( 26/02/2013) Emission « Le téléphone sonne »:  Comment lutter contre la récidive ?

Un jury d’experts dit non au « tout carcéral » et propose au gouvernement la peine de probation et des libérations conditionnelles d’office… Vos questions et commentaires dès 18h
avec : Françoise Tulkens, Pierre Victor Tournier, Xavier Bébin et Corinne Audouin

Colloque organisé par l’Association française de criminologie, 

Vendredi 16 – Samedi 17 novembre 2012, Crise, Pénal et Criminologie

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Extraits:

Philippe POTTIER,

Directeur des services pénitentiaires d’insertion et de probation, directeur de l’ENAP

Où en est la criminologie aujourd’hui ?

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Martine Herzog Evans

Professeur de droit, Université de Reims

Où en est la criminologie aujourd’hui ?

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 Reportage BBC 18 juin 2012: « Ex-offender Allan Weaver’s film aims to change attitudes »

A DVD made by a man who has served five prison sentences is to be shown in public for the first time. The documentary, featuring Allan Weaver who is now a probation officer, aims to change the public’s attitudes to offenders. It is part of a new campaign to reduce Scotland’s high level of reoffending. BBC Scotland’s home affairs correspondent Reevel Alderson reports.

Voir aussi sur le site le livre d’Allan WEAVER: ALLAN WEAVER (2008) “So You Think You Know Me?”

Lien vers le film « The road from crime »

Morceaux choisis de la conference de consensus

Que sait-on des facteurs qui favorisent la récidive ou de ceux qui, au contraire, aident à sortir de la délinquance?

Intervenants : Lila Kazemian, Criminologue, Professeure des Universités en Sociologie, Professeure associée au département de Sociologie du John Jay College of Criminal Justice – New York (Etats-Unis)». Stephen Farrall, Professeur de criminologie, Directeur du Centre de recherche en Criminologie à l’Ecole de Droit de l’Université de Sheffield (Royaume-Uni).

 

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The HOWARD league for PENAL REFORM: Intelligent Justice: Balancing the effects of community sentences and custody

A pamphlet for the Howard League for Penal Reform by Mike Hough, Stephen Farrall and Fergus McNeill

Lire l’article: Intelligent justice

Foreword
howard_league2The debate over whether ‘prison works’ seems interminable. The Howard League for Penal Reform has well established views on this topic, but political realities make revisiting this question, and perhaps deconstructing assumptions on both sides of the argument, both timely and valuable. The prison population in England and Wales has more than doubled since the mid 1990s. While the latest projections over the coming six years suggest that this growth may be slowing, there is no suggestion that the number of men, women and children incarcerated on any one day will drop below 80,000. Statisticians’ most optimistic assessment suggests numbers could at most drop to the level first reached in 2007 – an increase of 86 per cent compared to the prison population in 1991.
At the same time, the realities of running a justice system during an age of austerity are becoming ever clearer. The Ministry of Justice must achieve £2bn annual savings by March 2015 and the failure to deliver sentencing reforms originally proposed by Kenneth Clarke has meant that around £130m of potential savings have been lost. A recent report by the National Audit Office found that the agency in charge of prisons and probation is now projected to overspend by £32m in 2012-13 alone. If that is the difficult context for policymakers, then this paper, written by three leading criminologists on behalf of the Howard League, provides a framework for new thinking that might provide an escape from the current prisons crisis. The Ministry of Justice does not have the funds to build its way out of the overcrowding in the system, and there is little scope for further efficiency savings without endangering key principles of security and giving up on any pretence of a ‘rehabilitation revolution’. As the Chief Inspector of Prisons wrote in his most recent annual report, “if a rehabilitation revolution is to be delivered, there is a clear choice for politicians and policy makers – reduce prison populations or increase prison budgets.” This paper begins by examining the perennial arguments around the efficacy of community sentencing over short spells in custody. An even-handed analysis concedes that the picture is not a simple one, and that indeed it is the very complexity of the problem that necessitates a value-based approach to penal policy. It suggests that any cost-benefit analysis must take into account the long term impact of dramatic increases in imprisonment, which bring with them increases in a number of social problems that themselves sow the seeds for future crime: be it family breakdown, drug and alcohol addiction or poor physical and mental health. In the United States for example, this has seen the creation of a system “that feeds upon itself” and which has left many individual states near bankruptcy. (suite…)

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