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" sanctions they impose on offenders are typically more severe than standard probation or parole and less severe than traditional incarceration. "
Intensive Probation Supervision: Controlling Crime and Incarceration - Page 2
by Carol A. Edgar - 1993 - 137 pages
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Federal Prison Expansion: Overcrowding Reduced But Inmate Population Growth ...

United States. General Accounting Office - Prisons - 1993 - 44 pages
...nonprison sanctions; ''Intermediate sanctions refer to programs that impose sanctions on offenders that are typically more severe than standard probation...parole and less severe than traditional incarceration. Conclusions Agency Comments the level of crowding that is acceptable; and whether costs are considered...
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Intensive Probation Supervision: Crime-control and Cost-saving Effectiveness ...

United States. General Accounting Office - Alternatives to imprisonment - 1993 - 16 pages
...referred to collectively as intermediate sanctions. These programs get their name from the fact that the sanctions they impose on offenders are typically more severe than standard probation and less severe than traditional incarceration. Examples of intermediate sanctions include electronic...
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Sentencing: Intermediate Sanctions in the Federal Criminal Justice System ...

United States. General Accounting Office - Alternatives to imprisonment - 1994 - 140 pages
...OBJECTIVE 1; SANCTIONS Background Intermediate sanction programs get their name from the fact that the sanctions they impose on offenders are typically more severe than standard probation and less severe than traditional imprisonment. Examples of intermediate sanctions Include shock incarceration,...
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