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It is clear that virtually all criminal justice organizations,
including jails, are driven by information. From initial intake to
final release, virtually all key decisions are largely driven by
the availability, quality, and careful analysis of data to support
the variety of decisions made by jail administrators and personnel.
Jails should consider themselves as information- processing
organizations and active users of information technologies. A
precondition of effective management support in the jail system is
having access to accurate, high-quality data that can be presented
in the appropriate formats. For most jails, this requires a jail
management information system (MIS) that is adequate to support all
routine inmate-processing activities. Even when a jail has an
adequate MIS, we often see inadequacies in the design of
performance measures and inmate-monitoring indexes and, more
generally, in quantitative analyses that make use of this
information. This book uses many years of the authors' collective
experience in addressing the information technology (IT)
infrastructure, database content, and analytical capacities of
innumerable criminal justice institutions to develop a guide to the
development and use of a jail information system. The book also
discusses a jail capacity planning guide.
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