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96-98, Rue des Confédérés
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Belgium

A new publication from the Center for Court Innovation and the US Department of Justice's Bureau of Justice Assistance, entitled, Small Experiements, Big Change, features a programme in Hawaii.
The History of HOPE Probation
In 2004, First Circuit Judge Steven Alm launched a pilot program to reduce probation violations by drug offenders and others at high risk of recidivism. This high-intensity supervision program, called HOPE Probation (Hawaii’s Opportunity Probation with Enforcement), is the first and only of its kind in the nation. Probationers in HOPE Probation receive swift, predictable, and immediate sanctions – typically resulting in several days in jail – for each detected violation, such as detected drug use or missed appointments with a probation officer.
How HOPE Works
In HOPE Probation, defendants are clearly warned that if they violate the rules, they go to jail. Defendants are required to call a hotline each weekday morning to find out if they must take a drug test that day. Random drug testing occurs at least once a week for the first two months.
If probationers test positive, they are arrested immediately. If they fail to appear for the test or violate other terms of probation, warrants for their arrest are issued immediately. Once they are apprehended, a probation modification hearing is held two days later, and violators are typically sentenced to a short jail term. The jail time may increase for subsequent violations and repeat offenders are often ordered into residential treatment.
Program Success
Evaluation results indicate the program is highly successful at reducing drug use and crime, even among difficult populations such as methamphetamine abusers and domestic violence offenders.
Word of Hawaii’s HOPE Probation has been spreading. Judge Alm has been invited to present information on the opportunities and obstacles afforded by this new approach to criminal justice policymakers, analysts and practitioners in the U.S. and abroad.
Judge Alm has developed “Benchmarks for Success” that can be used as a guide for programs who would like to use the HOPE model.
The report by the Center for Court Innovation, can be downloaded from this website by clicking on the PDF icon below.
For more information, you can visit the Hope Website.
How do programmes like HOPE fit with the aims and objectives of an organisation like Europe Against Drugs (EURAD)?
Secretary General, Fay Watson says "We are extremely interested in watching and reviewing the results of programmes like HOPE, which appears to have the potential to be an appropriate alternative to detention, both for the person involved and for wider society. We recently responded to a European Commission Green Paper on criminal justice where we drew attention to the Hope programme's reported success to date".

In response to a notified increase in HIV cases among injecting drug users (IDU) in Greece and Romania, the European Commission asked the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) and the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) in November 2011 to conduct a rapid inquiry to investigate whether such increases had occurred in other countries. Read more about New EMCDDA Rapid Assessment on HIV in injecting drug users in the EU/EEA, following a reported increase of cases in Greece and Romania

The conference will focus on the theme "From Clinical practice to Public Health: The two dimensions of Brief Interventions" and will be held on 27th - 28th September 2012 in Barcelona. The conference will be in English but translation into Spanish will be available. Read more about 9th Conference of INEBRIA: International Network on Brief Interventions for Alcohol and Other Drugs

The EMCDDA will hold a two-week summer school on illicit drugs in Lisbon from 2nd-13th July 2012. Only 50 places available. Read more about Registration opens for European summer school on illicit drugs

A study from Rhode Island Hospital has found that collaborative behavioral management may be effective in reducing substance abuse in the parole setting. Read more about Using behavioral management to reduce substance abuse, crime and re-arrest among drug-involved parolees