Abstract
From 1996 until about 2000 the Canadian Level of Service Inventory – Revised (LSI-R) was in use in a number of probation services in England and Wales, and it is still in use in the Jersey Probation and After-Care Service. This article reviews what has been learned about risk and need assessment in British probation through the use of LSI-R, drawing on data collected for a Home Office study and for evaluative research in Jersey. Particular areas of interest are accuracy, differences between male and female offenders, the comparative effectiveness of probation and community service, the apparent counterproductive impact of probation on low-risk offenders, and the efficacy of risk-related change measurement. The conclusion points out the wide-ranging advantages of risk/need assessment for probation services, and discusses why services in England and Wales have been slow to benefit from this.
Acknowledgments
I am grateful to the Home Office and the Jersey Probation and After-Care Service for supporting this research; to Jocelyn Kynch, who worked on the data for the Home Office study; to Helen Miles, who worked on the Jersey data; to Peter Davies and the late David Sutton of the Cognitive Centre Foundation, who helped to set up the original pilot studies; to Dr Gwen Robinson, who gave me the opportunity to present and discuss a version of this paper in the “Risk” seminar series at Sheffield University; to the many probation staff who carried out the assessments and helped to provide the data; and to the anonymous referees of the original version of this article for a number of helpful suggestions.