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Shock-Incarceration Programs in Israeli Sanctioning Policy: Toward a New Model of Punishment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 July 2014

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Issues such as prison overcrowding, a growing realization that prisons cannot rehabilitate, and the belief that many inmates could be adequately managed in less intrusive and costly settings, have led Israeli scholars and practitioners, in the last four decades, to devote efforts to the development of alternative sanctions to imprisonment. Specifically, the focus has been on the development and elaboration of alternative sanctions that match the severity of punishment to the seriousness of the crime.

Intermediate sanctions (also called “alternative sanctions,” “alternatives to imprisonment,” or “community-based sanctions”) have been proposed as “ways to manage the burgeoning numbers of offenders without sacrificing public safety.” These punishment options are considered to fall on a continuum between traditional probation supervision and traditional incarceration.

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Copyright © Cambridge University Press and The Faculty of Law, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem 2002

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42 Data in Tables 1 and 2 are based on the Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics, 2001 and 2000.

43 The Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics does not present statistics regarding convictions in which specific penalties other than imprisonment, suspended sentence and fine were imposed as well as the imposition of “other” sanctions in the year 2000. The general term “others” used by the Israeli CBS refers to probation, community service and service work.

44 Each type of penalty is defined, by the Israeli Bureau of Statistics, as the major penalty that was imposed by the court, although it may include combinations with other penalties.

45 Data is based on the Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics, 2001.

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51 See D. MacKenzie and A. Piquero, supra n. 18.

52 See D. MacKenzie and E. Hebert, supra n. 27.

53 See D. MacKenzie, D. Wilson, D. Styve, and A. Gover, supra n. 21.

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80 See D. MacKenzie and C. Souryal, supra. n. 4.

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88 See D. MacKenzie and C. Souryal, supra n. 4.

89 See C. Clark and D. Aziz, supra n. 83.

90 See D. MacKenzie and A. Piquero, supra n. 18.

91 See D. MacKenzie and C. Souryal, supra n. 4.

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105 See www.1upinfo.com/Israel, supra n. 103.

106 See D. MacKenzie and C. Souryal, supra n. 4

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108 See D. MacKenzie, D. Wilson, and S. Kider, supra, n. 22.

109 See D. MacKenzie and D. G. Parent, supra n. 70.

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113 See D. MacKenzie and A. Piquero, supra n. 18.

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121 See L. Sebba, ibid.

122 See L. Sebba, ibid.

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129 See D. MacKenzie and H. Donaldson, supra n. 19.

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132 See D. MacKenzie and C. Souryal, supra n. 73; see E. Zamble and F. Proporino, supra n. 83.

133 See J. C. Burns and G. F. Vito, supra n. 19; D. MacKenzie and H. Donaldson, supra n. 19; J. K. Zachariah, supra n. 19; see D. MacKenzie and A. Piquero, supra n. 18.

134 See D. MacKenzie, D. Wilson, G. Styve, and A. Gover, supra n. 21; see D. MacKenzie and C. Souryal, supra n. 4; see D. MacKenzie and J. W. Shaw, supra n. 92.

135 See D. MacKenzie and A. Piquero, supra n. 18.