Longer jail terms cut reoffending Ministry study finds
Offenders jailed for between two and four years have lower re- offending rates than those given sentences of between one and two years, the first comparison of its kind revealed.
And criminals jailed for between one and two years also had lower reoffending rates than those jailed for less than 12 months, the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) figures showed yesterday.
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Hide AdJustice Secretary Kenneth Clarke said it was a “national scandal” that nearly half of all offenders reoffend within a year of being released and said the data underlined “the urgent need” for action on the issue.
“Sentences must properly punish offenders as well as address the causes of their offending so that they are made ready to go straight once their punishment has ended,” Mr Clarke said. “Prisons need to be places of hard work, not idleness, and both prison and non-custodial sentences need to do much more to properly address the serious underlying causes of crime such as drugs and mental illness.”
In 2008, the latest year for which figures are available, 35.7 per cent of criminals sentenced to between two and four years reoffended within 12 months, compared with 42.9 per cent of those sentenced to between one and two years.
Those serving the longer sentences committed an average of 1.075 further offences after being released, compared with an average of 1.347 offences for those on the shorter sentences.
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Hide AdEach set of criminals compared in these figures were jailed for similar offences, had a similar number of previous convictions, and were of a similar age, gender and ethnicity, officials said.
Other figures comparing like-for-like criminals showed 40 per cent of offenders sentenced to between one and two years in jail went on to reoffend within a year, compared with 44.5 per cent of those jailed for less than 12 months.
But officials said it was not possible to say whether the differences were due to increased time spent in prison, the increased time on licence after their release, or the use of offender management programmes.