A judicial disposition where juvenile offenders are subject to conditions imposed by the juvenile court but are permitted to remain in the community under the supervision of a probation officer.
What is probation
100
Risk/needs assessments are held at these to attempt to predict probability of recidivism
What are invervals
100
The standard that juvenile judges adhere to at the revocation hearing
What is reasonable effort
100
This requires offenders to repay the victims or community
What is restitution
100
These are alternatives to incarceration
What are house arrest and electronic monitoring
200
The four basic functions of juvenile probation
What are intake, management of caseloads, supervision, and investigation
200
Concern for public safety in the 1980s caused probation departments to develop classification systems to place probationers under one of these
What are intensive, medium, or minimum supervision
200
A juvenile’s probation can revoked if he or she violates these, which are set by the judge
What are parameters
200
How probation is administered
What is locally, by the state, or combination of both
200
Restitution and intensive probation have shown to be this
What is somewhat effective
300
The three types of juvenile restitution
What are financial restitution, direct service to victim, and community service
300
The four risk factors
What are age of conviction, prior arrest record, nature of offense, and school or employment patterns
300
This must be presented that the youth’s refusal or inability to profit from the services and programs show that he or she cannot stay in the community.
What is clear and convincing evidence
300
Probation allows juveniles to do this
What is remain in the community while being subject to certain conditions
300
These are duties of the probation officer
What are intake, caseload management, supervision and investigation, and report writing
400
Intermediate punishment options provide a way to administer individual sentences for each offender as alternatives to prison and/or probation. These are four examples of such punishment
What are restitution, house arrest, electronic monitoring, and intensive supervision
400
The tools probation departments use to determine an appropriate probation plan for each juvenile.
What are classification systems and risk/needs assessments.
400
This is why probation can be revoked
What is if a reasonable effort has been made to comply
400
How can restitution be made
What is financially, through direct service to the victim, or through service to the community
400
This person's consistent involvement throughout the juvenile’s time on probation has a positive effect
Who is the probation officer
500
The roles of probation officers
What are to decide at intake whether or not to file a petition, caseload management, supervision and investigation, and report to assist judge
500
The four needs assessments
What are emotional stability, financial management, family relationships, and health
500
The rights that are given to juvenile probationers.
What are right to a hearing, right to five-day notification of the probation revocation hearing, right to an attorney, right to confrontation, right to see reports citing his or her violations
500
Intensive probation requires this
What is increased contact and additional controls on probationers
500
State versus local government and judicial versus executive branch are arguments over who should control this