NCJ Number
158463
Date Published
1996
Length
12 pages
Annotation
This article explores how new technologies will allow probation agencies to expand community-based intervention programs and effectively supervise even high-risk offenders.
Abstract
Criminal justice experts predict that technology and specialization will make community corrections safer, increasingly innovative, and cost-effective alternatives to incarceration. The Maricopa County (Arizona) probation department is moving toward complete automation of its information system. Field officers will use notebook computers to add information to the database, and the data will produce the numbers and information needed by the department's planning and program division. The department has created a number of programs in which probationers can be supervised in different ways. Some of these alternatives include literacy centers, a drug court, programs for the mentally ill, and a day reporting center; additional intermediate sanctions include day fines, restitution, community service, intensive probation, and risk assessments. 8 references