Dictionary Definition
recidivist
Noun
1 someone who is repeatedly arrested for criminal
behavior (especially for the same criminal behavior) [syn: repeater, habitual
criminal]
2 someone who lapses into previous undesirable
patterns of behavior [syn: backslider, reversionist]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- Repeat offender
- One who falls back into prior habits, especially criminal habits.
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
Recidivism (IPA:
/ɹɪˈsɪdɪvɪzm̩/. From recidive + ism, from Latin
recidīvus "recurring", from re- "back" + cadō "I fall") is the act
of a person repeating an undesirable behavior after they have
either experienced negative consequences of that behavior, or have
been treated or trained to extinguish that behavior. The term is
most frequently used in conjunction with substance
abuse and criminal
behavior. For example, scientific literature may refer to the
recidivism of sexual
offenders, meaning the frequency with which they are detected
or apprehended committing additional sexual crimes after being
released from prison for similar crimes. (If to be counted as
recidivism the re-offending requires voluntary disclosure or arrest
and conviction, the real recidivism rate may differ substantially
from reported rates.) As another example, alcoholic recidivism
might refer to the proportion of people who, after successful
treatment, report having, or are determined to have, returned to
the abuse of alcohol.
Recidivism rates
As reported on BBC Radio 4 on
2 September 2005, the recidivism rates for released prisoners in
the United
States of America is 60% compared with 50% in the United
Kingdom but cross-country statistical comparisons are often
questionable. The report attributed the lower recidivism rate in
the UK to a focus on rehabilitation and education of prisoners
compared with the US focus on punishment, deterrence
and keeping potentially dangerous individuals away from
society.
Some observers now view the treatment of
recidivism, especially for criminal offenders who are at risk of
re-incarceration, as being a mental
health issue rather than a "crime" issue for which choice
theory based programs may be highly effective.
The
United States Department of Justice tracked the rearrest,
re-conviction, and re-incarceration of former inmates for 3 years
after their release from prisons in 15 States in 1994.http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/rpr94.htm
Key findings include:
Released prisoners with the highest rearrest
rates were robbers (70.2%), burglars (74.0%), larcenists (74.6%),
motor vehicle thieves (78.8%), those in prison for possessing or
selling stolen property (77.4%), and those in prison for
possessing, using, or selling illegal weapons (70.2%).
Within 3 years, 2.5% of released rapists were
arrested for another rape, and 1.2% of those who had served time
for homicide were arrested for homicide.
The 272,111 offenders discharged in 1994 had
accumulated 4.1 million arrest charges before their most recent
imprisonment and another 744,000 charges within 3 years of
release.
An accused's history of convictions
are called antecedents,
known colloquially as "previous" in the UK and "priors" in the
United States and Australia.
Positive recidivism
Since the word effectively means 'continued rebellion against authority', the ethics and morals of recidivism are dependent on who defines 'undesirable behavior'. Positive examples of recidivism would include several notable individuals of the French Resistance, who continued exhibiting behavior not desired by the de facto rulers of France at the time, and many activists in the American civil rights movement.Michael
Maltz wrote an extensive
monograph (2 MB) on the subject of recidivism in the US in
1994.
Contemporary slang
In the late 1970s a cricket team from the West
Midlands, headed by Nigel David (Ned) Barker, shortened recidivist
to form "Div" following a misfield from a player on their team.
"Div" has become a popularly used derogatory term to mean a stupid
or ignorant person. It is now widely used across the UK by many
youths as a preferred, more friendly type of insult.
External links
recidivist in Czech: Recidiva
recidivist in Danish: Recidivitet
recidivist in German: Rückfall
(Strafrecht)
recidivist in French: Récidive (droit
français)
recidivist in Japanese: 累犯
recidivist in Dutch: Recidive
recidivist in Serbian: Рецидивизам
recidivist in Chinese: 累犯
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Adamic,
Sabbath-breaker, apostate, atavistic, atheist, atheistic, backslider, backsliding, bad egg, bad
lot, black sheep, blasphemer, blasphemous, bolter, carnal, collaborationist,
collaborator,
convert, defector, degenerate, deserter, erring, fallen, fallen angel, fallen from
grace, fifth columnist, fleshly, frail, impious, impure, infirm, irreligious, irreverent, lapsed, lecher, lost lamb, lost sheep,
lost soul, miscreant,
mugwump, of easy virtue,
peccable, pervert, pimp, postlapsarian, prodigal, prodigal son,
profanatory,
profane, profligate, proselyte, quisling, reactionary, recessive, recidivistic, recidivous, recreant, regressive, renegade, renegado, renegate, repeater, reprobate, retrograde, retrogressive, retrorse, retroverse, returnable, returnee, reversible, reversional, reversionary, reversioner, reversionist, revertible, revulsionary, runagate, sacrilegious, sacrilegist, scapegrace, schismatic, seceder, secessionist, separatist, sorry lot,
strikebreaker,
tergiversant,
tergiversator,
traitor, trollop, turnabout, turncoat, turntail, two-time loser,
unangelic, unbeliever, unchaste, unclean, undutiful, ungodly, ungood, unrighteous, unsaintly, unvirtuous, virtueless, wanton, wayward, weak, whore