Four Eras Of Community Corrections

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What is Community Based Corrections? According to Leanne Fiftal Alarid in Community Based Corrections, “Community corrections refers to any sanction in which offenders serve all or a portion of their entire sentence in the community” (Alarid 4). Basically Community corrections allows an offender to go about their day to day - with many restrictions - before, during, or after their sentence while still maintaining their presence in the public instead of in prison or jail. Community corrections is used to help repair damages to the victims or community. It is also used to help reduce the chance of re-offending.
There are several forms of community based corrections the most commonly known one being that of probation. According to David Dressler …show more content…

Using the CCAs, local governments are issued funding by the states with which they can use the funds the funds in ways that “more closely reflect community values and attitudes” (33). These funds are used by local probation agencies to develop more treatment programs and a wider range of community supervision. Community supervision is then broken into four eras of probation. These four eras are case work, brokerage of services, the justice model, and neighborhood-based …show more content…

The pretrial release decision is made almost immediately after arrest, so as to allow the defendant to live and work as a productive members of the community until their next court date. To be granted pretrial release, an offender must submit to testing using a validated assessment instrument and an interview. This interview cannot be based on the weight of the suspected crime nor do any questions about suspected crime have to be answered. This interview and instruments are primarily used as a risk assessment tool to gauge how likely the offender is to be a risk to the community or risk of failing to appear. Pretrial supervision can be, but is not always, used as a requirement of pretrial release. According to Alarid in the pretrial supervision subsection of Community-Based

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