Publication | Closed Access
Risk/Need Assessment, Offender Classification, and the Role of Childhood Abuse
147
Citations
18
References
2001
Year
Recidivism RatesTrauma In ChildPediatric TraumaPsychologyCorrectional PracticeHealth SciencesPsychiatryChildhood AbuseCorrectional ClassificationChild AbuseForensic PsychiatryOffender ClassificationCriminal JusticeChild DevelopmentSubstance AbuseSexual AbusePediatricsChild Sexual AbuseMedicineChild Protection
Over the last several decades, the use of risk/need assessments has had a great impact on correctional classification and treatment decisions. One instrument that is now being used by many correctional agencies in the United States is the Level of Service Inventory-Revised (LSI-R). Criticisms of the LSI-R include failure to consider physical and sexual abuse as risk factors and failure to modify the instrument for the assessment of female offenders. Using a sample of 442 offenders (317 male and 125 female), this research investigates (a) the validity of the LSI-R for both females and males and (b) the relationship between childhood abuse, the LSI-R, and recidivism rates. Analyses indicated that the LSI-R is a valid (predictive) instrument for this sample of female offenders and that a history of prior abuse fails to add to the prediction of reincarceration, once risk is controlled for using the LSI-R. Implications for further research are discussed.
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