2013
DOI: 10.1177/0093854812464220
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Agreement About Intervention Plans By Probation Officers

Abstract: Introducing instruments to structure risk assessment has been shown to improve agreement between probation professionals about the assessment of offenders’ risks and needs. The subsequent decisions about intervention plans, however, are to a large extent still unstructured. This article addresses the question of whether probation officers agree about intervention plans and whether agreement differs between experienced and less experienced probation officers. A group of 44 Dutch probation officers wrote interve… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…The new probation officers were more experienced than the officers who had dropped out. In the RISc2-study, we had already concluded that experience does not have a substantial effect on the agreement between probation officers about intervention plans (Bosker et al, 2013a), and indeed additional analyses in the RISc3-study showed that the higher number of experienced probation officers did not influence the results substantially. Because working with the same group of professionals in two studies proved to be difficult, working with two random samples might have been easier and probably would have led to similar results.…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 79%
See 4 more Smart Citations
“…The new probation officers were more experienced than the officers who had dropped out. In the RISc2-study, we had already concluded that experience does not have a substantial effect on the agreement between probation officers about intervention plans (Bosker et al, 2013a), and indeed additional analyses in the RISc3-study showed that the higher number of experienced probation officers did not influence the results substantially. Because working with the same group of professionals in two studies proved to be difficult, working with two random samples might have been easier and probably would have led to similar results.…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…In that study, a group of Dutch probation officers was asked to write intervention plans for four cases in which the risk and needs assessment was given. Although results differed per domain of the intervention plan, overall agreement was poor (Bosker et al, 2013a).…”
Section: Decision Support For Intervention Plansmentioning
confidence: 95%
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