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pro vyhledávání: '"Alexander M. Holsinger"'
Autor:
Alexander M. Holsinger
Publikováno v:
Victims & Offenders. 16:1029-1039
Publikováno v:
Journal of Criminal Justice Education. 29:178-197
Due to the media, many students enter undergraduate Criminal Justice programs with biased and/or entertainment-based perceptions about justice generally, and the Criminal Justice system in particular. As a result, many instructors may be compelled to
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Criminal Justice. 43:167-180
Jurisdictions at every level throughout the U.S. are paying an increasing amount of attention to pretrial case processing. The primary areas of attention appear to be on risk assessment development and classification, the effects of pretrial detentio
Publikováno v:
Criminal Justice and Behavior. 44:121-137
We provide a comparison of analyses used to estimate predictive validity, across fixed (logistic regression and area under the curve receiver operating characteristic [AUC-ROC]) and variable (Cox regression and Harrell’s C) lengths of follow-up. Th
Publikováno v:
Federal Sentencing Reporter. 27:216-221
Implementation of Actuarial Risk/Need Assessment and its Effect on Community Supervision Revocations
Autor:
Alexander M. Holsinger
Publikováno v:
Justice Research and Policy. 15:95-122
While studies examining the predictive validity of the Level of Service Inventory — Revised (LSI-R) are useful and should continue, more research needs to be done in the area of systemic change: Once the LSI-R has been adopted and fully integrated
Publikováno v:
Journal of Crime and Justice. 37:275-283
In 2009 the Administrative Office of the US Courts developed and piloted a training program (STARR) for probation and pretrial officers. The purpose of this program was to train officers in the use of core correctional practices in their one-on-one i
Autor:
Alexander M. Holsinger, James C. Oleson, Scott W. VanBenschoten, Melissa Alexander, Charles R. Robinson, Christopher T. Lowenkamp
Publikováno v:
Journal of Crime and Justice. 35:167-188
The recent application of the risk–need–responsivity (RNR) model, in conjunction with core correctional practices, has offered promising results. In the present study, supervision officers were trained in core correctional skills and the RNR mode
Autor:
Scott W. VanBenschoten, Christopher T. Lowenkamp, James C. Oleson, Charles R. Robinson, Alexander M. Holsinger
Publikováno v:
Journal of Crime and Justice. 35:239-248
The science and methodology of offender assessment have undergone distinct and increasingly rapid changes over the last several decades. The field of corrections is currently well into the ‘third generation’ of actuarial assessment development, a