Affiliation:
1. Consultant to Juvenile Division of the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois
2. Private Practice, Woodbury, Minnesota
3. Former Consultant to U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
4. University of Illinois Chicago School of Medicine
Abstract
This article is an evaluation of established actuarial probation-parole tests in light of new data on violent and homicidal behavior. Probation–parole tests originally were developed by observing risks related with recidivism or return to court after release (i.e., the “danger” of releasing an individual) by following offenders in court records for up to 10 years. Commonly used probation-parole tests together comprise 82 distinct items related to characteristics of the offender: home, school, peers. Job, family, individual-medical, community, and court contacts. The risks for violence and homicide found by Zagar, et al. were compared with prior meta-analyses of risks with the criterion of violent delinquency. Bootstrapped logistic regressions in Zagar and colleagues' new data yielded highly accurate predictions of violence, showing that improved methods and sampling can lead to still higher accuracy than had been achieved by established probation-parole tests. A general discussion of the usefulness of actuarial tests and answers to challenges of their validity for decision making are provided.
Cited by
18 articles.
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