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Recidivism of female systematic offenders:

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Presentation on theme: "Recidivism of female systematic offenders:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Recidivism of female systematic offenders:
Dr. Eric Blaauw VNN and Hanze University of Applied Sciences The Netherlands

2 Psychopathology and crime
After clinical admittance, 3-11 times higher risk of later convictions (Hodgins, 1995) With addiction 3-4 times higher chance of crime (review Bennett, Holloway & Farrington, 2008) Crack: 6 x Heroin: 3 x Cocaine: 2.5 x Amphetamines: 1.9 x Cannabis: 1.5 x Alcohol and benzodiazepines lead to higher (but unknown/variable) risk of crimes

3 Psychopathology and the justice system
In prisons 60% have problematic use of substances (30% alcohol, 38% drugs) and 54-60% had a mental disorder in the past year In Dutch TBS institutions (high security hospitals for court order patients) 100% had mental disorder and 65% had addiction (year prevalence) Of those who were (partially) not guilty by reasons of insanity, 46% were intoxicated and in 21% the intoxication caused escalation High prevalence of psychopathology among women in prison (Fazel & Danesh, 2002) See Blaauw & Roozen(2012)

4 Specific measure in the Netherlands
Measure to place individuals in Institution for Systematic Offenders (Dutch ISD) Since October 2004 Goals: Crime reduction through incapacitation Recidivism reduction through treatment and resocialisation Method: Two years measure with intramural and outpatient phases with individual plans

5 For whom is the measure intended?
Systematic offenders: More than 10 charges in past five years In past five years three or more imprisonments or mandatory treatment sentences Current criminal offence Safety of others requires a measure Excluding Not Guilty by Reasons of Insanity (NGRI)

6 Method In the central ISD institution for women
All women from start in 2004 until end 2012 Reports of NGRI examinations by psychiatrists/ psychologists, criminal record, parole reports and own reports Selection of 81 fairly complete reports minus 7 who had deceased Gathering of criminal records July 2015

7 Characteristics of the sample
Age 41 years (SD = 7) 82% history of mental health care 41% history of prostitution 61% no fixed abode Victim of sexual abuse 43% Victim of severe/repeated physical abuse 74%

8 Psychopathology in the sample
All but one addicted with 88% addicted to multiple substances 53% one (42%) or more Axis I disorder other than substance disorder 75% one (57%) or more personality disorders 59% borderline intellectual functioning at most (N = 44) Blaauw, E., Strijker, G., Boerema, Y., Veersma, E., van der Meer-Jansma, M., & Anthonio, G. (2016). Dual diagnoses among detained female systematic offenders. Advances in Dual Diagnosis, 9(1), 7–13.

9 Recidivism after two years
After prison 56% In sample of male highly active repeated offenders 72-74% (Tollenaar & Laan, 2012; Tollenaar, Laan & Beijersbergen, 2014) In present sample 58%

10 Recidivism in the sample
11% recidivism with very serious offence (> 8 years imprisonment) No difference in severity of offences after ISD Decrease in annual Number of crimes 3.2  .95, p<0.001 Days in police custody 68.6  26.8, p<0.001 Days in prison 85.3  23.5, p<0.001

11 Recidivism in the sample
No relationship with demographic characteristics, but weak negative relationship with antisocial PD No relationship with prior prostitution, physical abuse and sexual abuse X²(3) = 1.6, p = 0.66 No relationship with prior SUD, psychiatric disorder and personality disorder X²(2) = 3.4, p = 0.18

12 Conclusions Recidivism after ISD still high Recidivism after ISD lower than male ISD recidivism No relationship with prior pathology Every female systematic offender has a reasonable change to abstain from recidivism

13 Thank you for your attention

14 References Bennett, T.,Holloway, K., & Farrington, D. (2008). The statistical association between drug misuse and crime: A meta-analysis. Aggression and Violent Behavior, 13(2), 107–118. Blaauw, E., & Roozen, H. (2012) (Red.), Handboek Forensische Verslavingszorg. Utrecht, the Netherlands: Bohn, Stafleu en van Loghem. Blaauw, E., Strijker, G., Boerema, Y., Veersma, E., van der Meer-Jansma, M., & Anthonio, G. (2016). Dual diagnoses among detained female systematic offenders. Advances in Dual Diagnosis, 9(1), 7–13. Fazel, S. & Danesh, J. (2002) Serious mental disorder in prisoners: a systematic review of 62 surveys. Lancet, 359, 545– 550. Hodgins, S. (1995) Major mental disorder and crime: An overview. Psychology, Crime & Law, 2(1), 5-17. Popma, A., Blaauw, E., & Bijlsma, E. (2012). Psychiatrische comorbiditeit van verslaving in relatie tot criminaliteit. In Blaauw, E., & Roozen, H. (Red.), Handboek Forensische Verslavingszorg (pp ). Utrecht, the Netherlands : Bohn, Stafleu en van Loghem. Tollenaar, N., & Laan, A.M. van der (2012). Effecten van de ISD-maatregel: Technische rapportage. Den Haag, the Netherlands : WODC. Tollenaar, N., Laan, A.M. van der., & Beijersbergen, K.A. (2014). Korte- en langetermijneffecten van de ISD-maatregel. Den Haag, the Netherlands : WODC.


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