Centenial Celebration

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Date: April 30, 2024 Tue

Time: 3:22 am

Results for mapping

2 results found

Author: Cadora, Eric

Title: Travis Community Impact Supervision. Thinking About Location: Orienting Probation to Neighborhood Based Supervision

Summary: The Travis County Community Supervision and Corrections Department (CSCD) in Austin, Texas (the county’s adult probation department) has teamed up with The JFA Institute in a two-year effort to reengineer the operations of the department to support more effective supervision strategies. The goal is to strengthen probation by using an evidence-based practices (EBP) model. The Travis County CSCD, the Community Justice Assistance Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, and the Open Society Institute have provided funds to support the reengineering effort and use the department as an “incubator” site to develop, test and document organization-wide changes directed at improving assessment, supervision, sanctioning, personnel training and quality control policies. The Travis County CSCD is the fifth largest probation system in the state and, as such, has tremendous impact on the state probation system. The total number of offenders under some form of probation supervision in Travis County in FY 2005 was 22,827. This report presents an analysis of the geographical location of the Travis County probation population using mapping technology. The analysis was conducted by Eric Cadora and his team at the JFA Mapping Center in New York City. A great number of the persons entering and exiting the Texas prison system and persons on probation tend to concentrate in specific neighborhoods in our large metropolitan areas. Mapping analysis identifies these concentrations in specific geographical locations. The goal is to provide a visual depiction of the geographical distribution of the probation population to identify high density neighborhoods that can be targeted for a neighborhood based supervision approach. The neighborhood based approach consolidates caseloads with fewer officers specifically assigned to supervising probationers in those locations. This can be done in Travis County in at least three neighborhoods. The research also shows that neighborhoods receiving the most offenders released from prison are also neighborhoods with a high concentration of probationers. Present supervision practices between the probation and parole agencies in these neighborhoods are not coordinated. Collaboration between these agencies may lead to more effective supervision that leverages resources between the agencies and between the agencies and neighborhood partners. The visualization of concentrated parole and probation populations in what we call “high stakes” communities is critical for more effective policy. The notion is that, although we need policies that address the overall issue of criminality and the supervision of justice populations regardless of where persons are committing crimes or where they live, we also need to consider the location of concentrated justice populations.

Details: Washington, DC: JFA Institute, 2006. 18p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed July 18, 2011 at: http://caction.org/research_reports/reports/TravisCommunityImpactSupervision2006.pdf

Year: 2006

Country: United States

URL: http://caction.org/research_reports/reports/TravisCommunityImpactSupervision2006.pdf

Shelf Number: 122085

Keywords:
Alternatives to Incarceration
Community Corrections
Geographic Studies
Mapping
Neighborhoods
Parolees
Probation (Texas)
Probationers

Author: Lucht, Jim

Title: Enhancing Supervision and Support for Released Prisoners: A Documentation and Evaluation of the Community Supervision Mapping System

Summary: Mapping has become increasingly employed in the field of criminal justice. Compared to the more traditional types of justice mapping, such as crime prevention and detection, spatially viewing returning prisoners and the reentry services or resources in their communities is a more recent development. This final report introduces the Community Supervision Mapping System (CSMS), an online tool that enables users to map the formerly incarcerated and others on probation, along with related data such as service provider locations and police districts. CSMS was developed and piloted in Rhode Island in 2008, and was intentionally designed to be a user-friendly, low-cost software package that is easy to replicate in other jurisdictions. This report documents the development process, implementation with a variety of users, and process and initial outcome evaluation of CSMS. Results from the evaluation indicate that the most popular search features on CSMS include a probationer’s name, a specific city, the general radius around a landmark (including schools, addresses, or services), an individual’s Department of Correction ID number, and probation officer caseload numbers. Probation officers use CSMS more often than reentry, law enforcement, or other users, and tend to use a wider variety of features for a more extensive range of purposes.

Details: Washington, DC: Urban Institute, Justice Policy Center, 2011. 121p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed August 5, 2011 at: http://www.urban.org/uploadedpdf/412368-enhancing-supervision.pdf

Year: 2011

Country: United States

URL: http://www.urban.org/uploadedpdf/412368-enhancing-supervision.pdf

Shelf Number: 122301

Keywords:
Mapping
Probation
Probationers
Reentry (U.S.)