Agency, Criminogenic Risk and Needs, and Recidivism: A Prospective Longitudinal Study Including 14,000 Adult Justice-involved Individuals

Plain language summaryExamining whether justice-involved individuals can overcome criminogenic risk and needs through agency and the motivation to change their life courseWhy was the study done? A significant proportion of justice-involved individuals return in the criminal justice for a new crimina...

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Autores principales: Lussier, Patrick 1973- (Autor) ; Kouassi, Pagnol Landry (Autor) ; Frechette, Julien (Autor)
Tipo de documento: Electrónico Artículo
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2025
En: International journal of offender therapy and comparative criminology
Año: 2025, Volumen: 69, Número: 13/14, Páginas: 1978-2006
Acceso en línea: Volltext (kostenfrei)
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Sumario:Plain language summaryExamining whether justice-involved individuals can overcome criminogenic risk and needs through agency and the motivation to change their life courseWhy was the study done? A significant proportion of justice-involved individuals return in the criminal justice for a new criminal offense. Several approaches have been proposed to break this cycle. Among those, correctional services have relied on the risk-need-responsivity which stresses the importance of targeting criminogenic risk and needs through treatment and intervention. The role and importance of agency—the motivation to change their life course—as a key component of change and desistance from crime, has been neglected. What did the researchers do? The research team examined how important agency is by examining the community reentry of 14,000 justice-involved individuals and criminal recidivism over a maximum of an 8-year period. What did the researchers find? The research shows that, as expected, justice-involved individuals with more criminogenic risk and needs were more likely to recidivate. Individuals with very high risk and needs were 13 times more likely to recidivate than the very low risk and needs group. The findings did show that individuals who recognized their personal issues and were motivated to change were less likely to recidivate, especially among the higher risk and needs group. What do the findings mean? The findings reiterate that while agency is not sufficient for justice-involved individuals to change and desist from crime, it is part of the process. Addressing criminogenic risk and needs, especially for individuals facing challenging life adversities, can make desistance a long and difficult process, especially if interventions do not support agentic decisions and behaviors.
This study examines the role and importance of agency, defined as the ability to recognize personal issues and motivation to change. More specifically, the study aims to explore whether agency can help overcome criminogenic risk and needs in the context of community re-entry among justice-involved individuals. Based on a sample of 14,000 adult males sentenced to probation or incarceration, a series of survival analyses (e.g., Cox proportional hazards) were used to investigate the association between criminogenic risk and needs and agency-related indicators in relation to recidivism. The findings underscore the importance of criminogenic risks and needs while emphasizing the role of motivation to change as a possible moderator. Addressing criminogenic risk and needs while justice-involved individuals face numerous barriers and challenges make desistance from crime a long and difficult process, especially if interventions do not support agentic decisions and behaviors.
ISSN:1552-6933
DOI:10.1177/0306624X251349530