A policy of selective incapacitation holds that crime can be significantly reduced through sentencing policies that incarcerate habitual offenders for longer periods. This policy assumes the predictability of stable, prolific criminal careers over time, which, if interrupted by lengthy incarceration, can significantly reduce crime. To determine the stability of criminal careers among the study sample, information on officially recorded crimes was coded for all sample members over the followup period. Data indicate that high-rate offenders did not remain high-rate offenders, either in absolute terms or with respect to other offenders. Differences in arrest patterns by race and age suggest the importance of sociocultural and situational factors in determining patterns of criminal behavior across groups and over time. Such instability in criminal careers does not support the feasibility of a policy of selective incapacitation. Implications for future research are discussed. 44 tables, 11 figures, 49 references.
Downloads
Related Datasets
Similar Publications
- Protective Factors for Sexual Violence: Understanding How Trajectories Relate to Perpetration in High School
- Genetic and Environmental Influences on Levels of Self-Control and Delinquent Peer Affiliation: Results From a Longitudinal Sample of Adolescent Twins
- Child Trafficking as a Predictor of Subsequent Juvenile Justice Involvement