1st Edition

Alternatives to Imprisonment Intentions and Reality

By Ulla V. Bondeson Copyright 2002

    The detrimental effects of imprisonment have been documented and accepted in most western countries. As a result, alternatives to incarceration have been sought in the effort to reform the penal system. Although during the last thirty years several Nordic official committees have recommended a reduction in the use of jail sentences and an increase in other forms of punishment (i.e. fines and probation) in the hope of decreasing crime and rehabilitating criminals, incarceration rates have been going up in Sweden, Denmark, and Norway. Still, the interest in alternatives to imprisonment continues to grow, but few studies have actually been published that examine their effectiveness.

    1: Problems and Theories; 2: The History of Non-Institutional Correction; 3: The Legislator's Intentions; 4: The Judge's Choice of Sanction; 5: The Effects of Sanctions—Recidivism and Prediction; 6: Supervision—Assistance or Control?; 7: Institutional Treatment—Punishment or Treatment?; 8: The Law in Books and the Law in Practice; 9: Lines of Development and Suggestions for Reform; Appendix: I: Sampling and Methodology; Appendix: II: Developments in the Use of Non-Custodial Sanctions

    Biography

    Ulla V. Bondeson