RT Article T1 The Role of Stigma Toward Mental Illness in Probation Officers’ Perceptions of Risk and Case Management Decisions$d JF Criminal justice and behavior VO 45 IS 5 SP 573 OP 588 A1 Eno Louden, Jennifer A2 Kennealy, Patrick J. A2 Manchak, Sarah M. A2 Ricks, Elijah P. LA English YR 2018 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1701690373 AB Recommendations for supervising offenders with mental illness have evolved from a narrow focus on treating psychopathology to an integration of mental health treatment and correctional interventions. Probation officers likely have inflated perceptions of risk for offenders with mental illness, which may result in improper risk assessment and misinformed risk management practices. In a sample of 89 probation officers, we examined perceptions of risk for probationers with and without mental illness and explored whether stigmatizing attitudes toward mental illness affect perceptions of risk and risk management strategies. Officers did not overestimate risk for offenders with mental illness, and stigma toward mental illness bore little influence on risk ratings and case management decisions. However, officers did rate the offender with mental illness as higher risk than the nondisordered offender and chose more punitive responses to a violation he committed—despite being informed that the offenders were of the same risk classification. K1 Probation officers K1 Community corrections K1 Risk assessment K1 Offenders with mental illness DO 10.1177/0093854818756148