Unit 4 Test

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False

Probation is the conditional freedom granted by a judicial officer to an adjudicated adult or juvenile offender after a period of incarceration.

Probation Officer

Responsible for initiating violating proceedings.

John Augustus

The man known as the first probation officer, a Boston shoemaker

Justice model

A contemporary model of imprisonment based on the social philosophy of just deserts.

Work house

A form of early imprisonment designed to instill a work ethic in the idle.

Pennsylvania System

A form of imprisonment developed by the Quakers that made use of solitary confinement and resulted in nations first penitentiary.

State use system

A form of inmate labor in which items produced by inmates are salable only to state agencies.

Intensive supervision

A form of probation supervision involving frequent face to face contacts between the probationary client and probation officers.

Grieving procedures

Formalized arrangements prisoners have to register complaints about the conditions of their confinement

Parole Boards

Grant discretionary parole.

Nothing works doctrine

Held that the treatment programs have little rehabilitative success.

Home Confinement

House arrest.

Maximum security prisons

House the most Marion's offender's and are characterized by double and triple security patterns.

False

If a judge orders that a convicted offender's sentence be suspended and places the offender on probation, no further steps can be taken to reinstate the suspended prison time regardless of the offender's behavior while on probation.

True

In 1935, an Indiana University sociology professor competed a groundbreaking study of prison life when he voluntarily served three months in prison as a participant observer to discover what being an inmate was really like.

False

In all state and federal prisons facilities combined, the number of incarcerated male prisoners is greater than the number of females incarcerated by a ratio of slightly more than two to one.

Homosexual relationships

In the society of captives, Gresham Sykes claims that prisoners are deprived of all of the following except

Bearden v. Georgia

US Supreme Court determined that probation cannot be revoked for failure to pay a fine and make restitution if it can be shown that the defendant was not responsible for the failure.

True

Under lex talionis the convicted offender was sentenced to a punishment that most closely approximated the original injury.

Revokating Hearing

Used to decide if an offender has violated the terms of his or her probation or parole by committing a new offense or failing to live up to the conditions of probation or parole.

False

When using shock probabtion, the judge sentences an offender to a prison term, then suspends the sentence before the offender actually starts to serve the sentence in jail or prison.

The reduction in number of older habitual offenders in prison

All of the following are listed as contributing to the "graying" of America's prison population except

Shock Incarceration

Allows for a three strike to six month regimen of military drill, drug treatment, exercise, and academic work in return for having several years removed from an inmate's sentence.

Warehousing

An imprisonment strategy that is based upon the desire to prevent recurrent crime but that has abandoned any hope of rehabilitation.

Mean dude

An inmate who is quick to fight and fights like a wild man is referred to as

Regional jail

Built and run using the combined resources of a variety of local jurisdictions.

Medical model

Characterized by a belief that offender's are sick and can be cured through behavioral and other forms of therapy.

True

Community service is a sentencing alternative that requires offenders to spend at least part of their time working for a community agency.

Ticket of Leave

Conditional release was granted under a...

Friend

Correctional officers can be classified according to certain categories. If an officer tries to fraternize with inmates, attempting to be "one of the guys," he or she would be classified as

Total institutions

Enclosed facilities where the inhabitants share all aspects of their lives.

The Balancing test

Established by the US Supreme Court in Pell v. Procunier has served as a guideline generally applicable to all prisons operations.

True

Few states have substantial capacity for the psychiatric treatment of mentally disturbed inmates.

False

Few states use parole boards to decide when an incarcerated offender is ready for conditional release; most of that function has been taken over by prison wardens.

True

Restitution is a court requirement that an offender pay money or provide services to the victim of the crime or provide services to the community.

Solitary Confinement

The feature of eastern and western penitentiaries that most clearly characterized the nineteenth century Pennsylvania correctional philosophy

Walnut Street Jail

The first American penitentiary, opened in the late 1700s in Philadelphia.

Quakers

The group that most influenced the beginnings of the American prison experience.

False

The just deserts model was a late nineteenth century correctional model based upon the use of the intermediate sentence and belief in the possible of rehabilitation of offender's.

Hands off doctrine

A policy of nonintervention with regard to prison management that American courts tended to follow until the late 1960s.

Work release

A prison program through which inmates are temporarily released into the community in order to meet job responsibilities.

False

A prisoner's mail from immediate family members may not be opened and censored by prisons authorities.

Community service

A sentencing alternative that requires offender's to spend least part of their time working for a community agency.

True

A split sentence requires an offender to serve at least part of his or her sentence in jail or prison, followed by a longer period or probation.

False

A state or federal confinement facility that has custodial authority over adults sentenced to confinement for less than one year is called prison.

False

An overview of various approaches to correctional treatment suggests that programs focused on rehabilitation should be abolished.

True

Any act or failure to act by a probationer that does not conform to the conditions of probation is a violation.

Probation and Parole

Are distinctly different forms of community corrections administered by different authorities.

True

At one time, England used hulks to house convicted offenders and send them to exile.

Balancing test

Attempts to weigh the constitutional rights of an individual against the authority of the state to make laws to protect its interest and its citizens.

Using forced labor and the silent system

Auburn prison, established in 1823 in New York State, attempted to reform prisons by...

Hedonists

Build their lifestyles round the limited pleasures that can be had within the confines of prison.

Rhodes v. Chapman

Dealt with the issue of prison overcrowding and held that placing two inmates in one cell is not cruel and unusual punishment.

Prison Subcultures

Develop independently of the plans of prison administrators.

True

Direct supervision jails are temporary confinement facilities that eliminate many of the traditional barriers between inmates and correctional staff.

True

Inmates have a right to consult "jailhouse lawyers" for advice if the prison does not provide assistance from trained legal professionals.

True

Jails are often thought of as the "shame of criminal justice"

The law of the dead

Lax talionis

Shock incarceration

Makes us of boot camp-type prisons to impress upon convicted offenders the realities of prison life.

False

Most female prison inmates have been convicted of violent crime.

False

Most male sexual aggression in prisons do not consider them selves heterosexual.

True

Parole is the status of an offender conditionally released from a prison by patrolling authority prior to the expiration of the sentence.

False

Prison argot is a secret language prisoners use to communicate that non one except the prisoners knows.

Security threat groups

Prison gangs who pose a threat to the safety of the correctional staff and the public are defined as:

True

Prisons riots are generally unplanned and tend to occur spontaneously, the result of some relatively minor precipitating event.

False

Prisons that flourished during the industrial prison era, and whose intent was to capitalize on the labor of convicts sentenced to confinement, were part of the reformatory concept.

Recidivism

Repetition of criminal behavior

Split Sentencing

Requires an offender to serve a period of confinement in a local, state, or federal facility followed by a period of probation.

Mixed sentencing

Requires that a convicted offender serve weekends in jail while on supervised probation in the community during the week.

Intermediate Sanction

Split sentencing, shock probation and parole, home confinement, shock incarceration and community service.

Conditions of parole/probation

State ordered limits imposed on all offender's who are released on either probation or parole.

False

The 1935 Taft-Hartley Act effectively ended the industrial prison era by restricting interstate commerce in prison made goods.

True

The US Supreme Court case of Hudson vs. Palmer asserts that the need for prison officials to conduct thorough and unannounced searches is greater than inmates' right to privacy in personal possessions.

Mempa v. Rhay

The US Supreme Court determined that both notice of the charges and a hearing a required in order to revoke an offender's probation.

Gagnon v. Scarpelli

The US Supreme Court extended the holding in Morissey v. Brewer to include probationers.

Cruz v. Beto

The case that required that inmates be given a reasonable opportunity to pursue their religious faith even if it differs from traditional forms of worship.

Civil death

The legal status of prisoners in some jurisdictions who are denied the opportunity to vote, hold public office, marry, or enter into contracts by virtue of their status as incarcerated felons.

Prison litigation reform act

The legislation that attempts to restrict the number of suits filed by inmates

False

The movement toward the wider use of private prisons is called corporationalization.

Design capacity

The number of inmates a prison was intended to hold when it was built or modified.

True

The number of probation and parole clients assigned to a probation or parole officer for supervision is referred to as the officer's caseload.

Hands-off doctrine

The policy followed by the courts until the 1960s in refusing to hear inmate complaints about the conditions of incarceration and the constitutional deprivations of inmate life

Shock Probation

The practice of sentencing offender's to prison, allowing them to apply for probationary release, and enacting such release in a surprise fashion.

The colonist

The process whereby institutionalized individuals come to accept prison lifestyles and criminal values.

US v. Knights

The search authority of probation and parole officers might be extended to police officers in certain situations.

Prison argot

The slang characteristics of prison subcultures and prison life

ADMAX

The term used by the federal government to denote ultra high security prisons.

Prison subculture

The values and behavioral patterns characteristic of prison inmates


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