About the Book
Prison overcrowding has led criminal justice experts to seek viable options to incarceration. House Arrest and Correctional Policy considers one of these new approaches and raises important legislative and constitutional questions as well as social and psychological issues. The authors discuss both the advantages and disadvantages of house arrest, consider several specific programmes, evaluate research undertaken in various states and outline their own research.
Table of Contents:
Foreword - Gilbert Geis
PART ONE: THE RISE OF INSTITUTIONAL INCARCERATION AND THE SEARCH FOR ALTERNATIVES
The Development of Imprisonment in the United States
Phase Four
Alternatives to Incarceration
Home Confinement
PART TWO: HOUSE ARREST AND JUVENILE JUSTICE
Jailing Juveniles
A Suicidal Policy?
The Deinstitutionalization Movement
Who Is Referred to House Arrest Programs and What Screening Criteria Are Used?
What Does `Success′ Mean in Such Programs and How Successful Are they?
What Is the Comparative Cost of These Programs?
Conclusion
PART THREE: A MODEL HOUSE ARREST PROGRAM FOR JUVENILES: WHAT MAKES IT WORK?
Administration and Staffing
Intake and Referral
Caseworker Qualifications and Responsibilities
Client Population Trends
Correlates of Success
A Closer Look
Program Funding and Costs
Judicial Support for the Program
Other Issues
Discretion and `Turf′
Juvenile `House Arrest′ Programs
Policy Implications
Legal Issues
Potential Impact on Detention Population and Costs
Implications of `House Arrest′ Policy for Juvenile Courts
PART FOUR: `HOUSE ARREST′ PROGRAMS FOR ADULT OFFENDERS IN KENTUCKY AND FLORIDA
The Kenton County, Kentucky Project
Findings
Expectations and Results
The State-Wide Florida Project
The Palm Beach County, Florida Projects
Discussion
PART FIVE: LEGAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES OF `HOUSE ARREST′
General Legal Issues
Fourth Amendment
Related Constitutional Amendments
Diminshed Rights of Offenders
Some Additional Legal Issues
General Social Issues
PART SIX: CONCLUSION
General Advantages of Home Confinement
Specific Advantages of Home Confinement
Questions and Reservations
About the Author :
Richard A. Ball is Professor Emeritus at Pennsylvania State University. He received his doctorate from Ohio State University in 1965. He served as Program Head for Administration of Justice for the 12-campus Commonwealth College of Penn State and earlier as Chair of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at West Virginia University. Professor Ball has also been a member of a number of editorial boards and an officer in different professional organizations. He has authored several monographs on community power structure and on correctional issues, and he has coedited two books on white-collar crime. He has authored or coauthored more than 100 articles and book chapters, including articles in the American Journal of Corrections, American Sociological Review, The American Sociologist, British Journal of Social Psychiatry, Correctional Psychology, Crime and Delinquency, Criminology, Deviant Behavior, Federal Probation, International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice, International Social Science Review, Journal of Communication, Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice, Journal of Small Business Management, Journal of Psychohistory, Justice Quarterly, Northern Kentucky Law Review, Qualitative Sociology, Rural Sociology, Social Forces, Social Problems, Sociological Focus, Sociological Symposium, Sociology and Social Welfare, Sociology of Work and Occupations, Urban Life, Victimology, and World Futures. He is Sage coauthor of House Arrest and Correctional Policy: Doing Time at Home (1988). His work extends beyond criminology to include philosophy, history, and cultural analysis as well as organizational dynamics and evaluation research. He has done cross-cultural field work, served as chief, Central Testing Branch, U.S. Army, and worked in both state and federal correctional institutions. In 1996, he collaborated on the production of the television documentary A Year and a Day dealing with prison history. His honors include the Outstanding Researcher Award at West Virginia University and the Outstanding Scholar Award at Penn State. In 2014, his name was engraved on the Scholars Wall at Potomac State College as one of eight graduates of Potomac State to be so honored during the 100-year history of the institution.
J. Robert Lilly is Regents Professor of Sociology/Criminology Emeritus at Northern Kentucky University. His research interests include the pattern of capital crimes committed by U.S. soldiers during World War II, the “commercial–corrections complex,” juvenile delinquency, house arrest and electronic monitoring, criminal justice in the People’s Republic of China, the sociology of law, and criminological theory. He has published in Criminology, the British Journal of Criminology, Crime and Delinquency, Social Problems, Legal Studies Forum, Northern Kentucky Law Review, Journal of Drug Issues, The New Scholar, Adolescence, Qualitative Sociology, Federal Probation, International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice, Justice Quarterly, and The Howard Journal of Criminal Justice. He has coauthored several articles and book chapters with Richard A. Ball, and he is coauthor of House Arrest and Correctional Policy: Doing Time at Home (1988). In 2003, he published La Face Cachée des GI’s: Les Viols commis par des soldats amércains en France, en Angleterre et en Allemange pendat la Second Guerre mondial, 1942–1945. It was translated into Italian and published (2004) as Stuppi Di Guerra: Le Violenze Commesse Dai Soldati Americani in Gran Bretagna, Francia e Germania 1942–1945. It was published in English in 2007 as Taken by Force: Rape and American GIs in Europe During World War II. The latter work is part of his extensive research on patterns of crimes and punishments experienced by U.S. soldiers in WWII in the European theater of war. The Hidden Face of the Liberators, a made-for-TV documentary by Program 33 (Paris), was broadcast in Switzerland and France in March 2006 and was a finalist at the International Television Festival of Monte Carlo in 2007. He is the past treasurer of the American Society of Criminology. In 1988, he was a visiting professor in the School of Law at Leicester Polytechnic and was a visiting scholar at All Soul’s College in Oxford, England. In 1992, he became a visiting professor at the University of Durham in England. Between 2006 and 2012, he was coeditor of The Howard Journal of Criminal Justice. Most recently he has been working on the historical development and impact of qualified immunity for police officers in the United States.