NCJ Number
120149
Date Published
1989
Length
74 pages
Annotation
As policymakers are faced with the dilemma of reducing prison overcrowding without the necessary funding to build additional prison space, this study was conducted to ascertain the public's views on alternatives to incarceration, including house arrest, intensively supervised probation, restitution, and community service.
Abstract
A total of 422 citizens of Alabama, heterogenous in terms of geography, race, sex, education, and age, filled out a detailed questionnaire on their attitudes about crime, Alabama's criminal justice system, and alternative sentences. In this pretest, respondents sentenced 23 hypothetical criminals, ranging from shoplifters to rapists and armed robbers, to probation or prison. After viewing a videotape describing prison overcrowding and five alternative sentences, respondents met in discussion groups, then filled out a second questionnaire, sentencing their 23 criminals to probation, prison, or one of the five alternatives. In the pretest, respondents chose prison in 18 of the cases; in the posttest, only four criminals were sentenced, one put on probation, and the remainder were given alternative sentences. Other findings reveal that the respondents' top priority for the criminal justice system is to protect public safety, not reduce prison overcrowding or budgets; that they believe in rehabilitation; and that they believe in deterrence. The respondents' supported alternative sentences for non-violent offenders only, when those seemed more appropriate and effective means of punishment.