Dispositional Discretion or Disparity: The Juvenile Probation Officer's Role in Delinquency Processing
- 1 February 1988
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in The Journal of Applied Behavioral Science
- Vol. 24 (1) , 81-100
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0021886388241008
Abstract
Concerns about bias and disparity in case dispositions-despite inconclusive evidence-have recently spurred interactionist research into the organizational processes and functionaries of juvenile justice. This article reports a study of the role of the juvenile probation officer (JPO) in affecting dispositions, in which the effects of extralegal factors were systematically tested. In one juvenile probation department in the southwestern U.S., 87 JPOs each completed a survey and recommended three dispositions for the case of a juvenile delinquent. The results indicate that the JPOs' background characteristics, organizational situations, and attitudes toward delinquency were crucial variables explaining dispositional disparity. The authors posit that the "IPO factor" can produce treatment differences sufficient to undermine the rehabilitative ideal and confound studies of judicial bias, and suggest that understanding the systematic nature of this factor might facilitate needed reform.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Legal outcomes and legal agents: Adding another dimension to the sex-sentencing controversy.Law and Human Behavior, 1985
- Detecting Sentencing Disparity: Some Problems and EvidenceAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1981
- Preadjudicatory detention in a large metropolitan juvenile court.Law and Human Behavior, 1981
- Formal rationality, substantive justice, and discrimination: A study of a juvenile court.Law and Human Behavior, 1980
- The Detention Decision: A Study of the Impact of Social Characteristics and Legal Factors in Two Metropolitan Juvenile CourtsSocial Forces, 1979
- Theoretical Interpretations of Social Class and Racial Differentials in Legal Decision-Making for JuvenilesThe Sociological Quarterly, 1979
- The Effect of Social Characteristics on Juvenile Court DispositionsThe Sociological Quarterly, 1977
- Probation Officers for Juveniles in CanadaCanadian Journal of Criminology and Corrections, 1976
- Race and Ethnicity Relative to Other Factors in Juvenile Court DispositionsAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1971
- Professional Role Orientations and Conflict StrategiesSocial Work, 1970