Canada In general, in Canada, prisoners are eligible to
apply for full parole after serving one-third of their sentences. Prisoners are also eligible to apply for
day parole, and can do this before being eligible to apply for full parole. Any prisoner whose sentence is less than two years is sent to a correctional
facility in the province or territory where they were convicted, whilst anyone sentenced to serve no less than two years will be sent to a
federal correctional facility and will thus have to deal with the
Parole Board of Canada. Parole is an option for most prisoners. However, parole is not guaranteed, particularly for prisoners serving life or indeterminate sentences. In cases of first-degree murder, one can apply for parole after 25 years if convicted of a single murder. However, if convicted of multiple murders, either of the first or second-degree, the sentencing judge previously had the discretion to make parole ineligibility periods consecutive – thereby extending parole ineligibility beyond 25 years and, in rare cases, beyond a normal life-span.
On May 27, 2022, the
Supreme Court of Canada unanimously ruled that extending parole ineligibility beyond one's foreseeable lifespan was unconstitutional for being "cruel and unusual" punishment.
China In
China, prisoners are often granted medical parole or
compassionate release, which releases them on the grounds that they must receive medical treatment which cannot be provided for in prison. Occasionally, medical parole is used as a less public way of releasing a wrongly convicted prisoner. The Chinese legal code has no explicit provision for exile, but often dissidents are released on the grounds that they need to be treated for a medical condition in another country, and with the understanding that they will be reincarcerated if they return to China. Dissidents who have been released on medical parole include
Ngawang Chophel,
Ngawang Sangdrol,
Phuntsog Nyidron,
Takna Jigme Zangpo,
Wang Dan,
Wei Jingsheng,
Gao Zhan and
Fang Lizhi.
Israel Until 2001, parole in Israel was possible only after the prisoner had served two thirds of their sentence. On 13 February 2001, the
Knesset passed a bill, brought forward by
Reuven Rivlin and
David Libai, which allowed the early release of prisoners who had served half of their prison term (the so-called "Deri Law"). The law was originally intended to help ease overcrowding in prisons.
Italy Libertà condizionata is covered by Article 176 of the Italian Penal Code. A prisoner is eligible if he has served at least 30 months (or 26 years for life sentences), and the time remaining on his sentence is less than half the total (normally), a quarter of the total (if previously convicted or never convicted) or five years (for sentences greater than 7.5 years). In 2006, 21 inmates were granted
libertà condizionata.
New Zealand In New Zealand, inmates serving a short sentence (up to two years) are automatically released after serving half their sentence, without a parole hearing. Inmates serving sentences of more than two years are normally seen by the New Zealand Parole Board after serving one-third of the sentence, although the judge at sentencing can make an order for a minimum non-parole period of up to two-thirds of the sentence. Inmates serving
life sentences usually serve a minimum of 10 years, or longer depending on the minimum non-parole period, before being eligible for parole. Parole is not an automatic right and it was declined in 71 percent of hearings in the year ending 30 June 2010. Life imprisonment without the possibility of parole has been given only once, to Brenton Tarrant for the 2019
Christchurch mosque shootings.
United Kingdom The Parole Boards in the UK are only involved in the release of prisoners with specific sentences. Indeterminate sentences (life imprisonment and
imprisonment for public protection) are always handled by the Parole Board because they have no fixed release date. Some determinate or "fixed" sentences, such as extended determinate sentences, are also handled by the Parole Board, but for the majority of prisoners the Parole Board will not be involved in their release. The conditions of release are called a licence, and parole is called
release on licence. There are seven standard licence conditions for all prisoners: • Be of good behaviour and not behave in a way which undermines the purpose of the licence period; • Not commit any offence; • Keep in touch with the supervising officer in accordance with instructions given by the supervising officer; • Receive visits from the supervising officer in accordance with instructions given by the supervising officer; • Reside permanently at an address approved by the supervising officer and obtain the prior permission of the supervising officer for any stay of one or more nights at a different address; • Not undertake work, or a particular type of work, unless it is approved by the supervising officer and notify the supervising officer in advance of any proposal to undertake work or a particular type of work; • Not travel outside the
United Kingdom, the
Channel Islands or the
Isle of Man, except with the prior permission of the supervising officer or for the purposes of immigration deportation or removal. When a prisoner does not have to have their release approved by the Parole Board, further "additional licence conditions" may be suggested by the Probation Service and set by prison governors. When the Parole Board is involved, the Probation Service may suggest additional conditions, but the Parole Board is responsible for determining which additional conditions will be added to the licence. Data reported by the
Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood in May 2025 showed that recall numbers have grown significantly in recent years. The figures she quoted showed that: • In 1993, 100 paroled prisoners were recalled to prison • In 2018, 6000 prisoners were recalled • In the year to March 2025, 13,600 prisoners were recalled. From 2014 many of the probation and license monitoring functions were
outsourced to
private-sector "community rehabilitation companies" (CRCs) as well as the
National Probation Service. In May 2019 the government announced that supervision of offenders, including supervision of offenders released on licence, would be re-nationalised. The decision was made following multiple criticisms of the system which led Chief probation inspector Dame
Glenys Stacey to describe the system as "irredeemably flawed".
United States Early history Penologist Zebulon Brockway introduced parole when he became superintendent of
Elmira Reformatory in
Elmira, New York. To manage prison populations and rehabilitate those incarcerated, he instituted a two-part strategy that consisted of indeterminate sentences and parole releases. This was significant in prison reform due to its implication that prisoners began their rehabilitation during incarceration, which would be recognizable by a
parole board. It also provided newfound emphasis on prisoners' protection from cruel and unusual punishment. Brockway's model became the foundation for the U.S. parole system, with heavy influence on adoption of parole boards, indeterminate sentencing, and the later switch to the new
penology. Eligibility rules vary by state, with some jurisdictions favoring indeterminate sentencing while others use determinate sentencing structures that limit chances for parole
. On the federal level, Congress abolished parole in the
Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984 (Pub. L. No. 98-473 § 218(a)(5), 98 Stat. 1837, 2027 [repealing 18 U.S.C.A. § 4201 et seq.]). Federal prisoners may, however, earn a maximum of 54 days good time credit per year against their sentence (18 U.S.C.A. § 3624(b)). Although federal parole was abolished, the number of individuals under federal community supervision has remained high. The U.S. Parole Commission still has jurisdiction over parole for those prisoners convicted of felonies in the District of Columbia and who are serving their sentences there, as well as over certain federally incarcerated military and international prisoners. In most states, the decision of whether an inmate is paroled is vested in a paroling authority such as a parole board. Mere
good conduct while incarcerated in and of itself does not necessarily guarantee that an inmate will be paroled. Other factors may enter into the decision to grant or deny parole, most commonly the establishment of a permanent residence and immediate, gainful employment or some other clearly visible means of self-support upon release (such as
Social Security if the prisoner is old enough to qualify). Depending upon the jurisdiction, the parole board may look at various factors such as the inmate's criminal history, participation in rehabilitation, education, or vocational programs, expressions of
remorse, admissions of guilt, and
insight (in the psychiatric sense) into the factors driving the inmate's decision to commit the crimes at issue (in order to estimate the likelihood that the inmate may reoffend upon encountering similar factors in the outside world after release). Research shows that evaluations of remorse can be subjective and is inconsistently applied across cases. Modern parole boards also rely on actuarial risk-assessment instruments, which estimates the likelihood of reoffending. Even with strong institutional behavior, parole is up to the board's discretion in most states and is not guaranteed. Many states now permit sentences of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole (such as for
murder and
espionage), but any prisoner not sentenced to such sentences or the
death penalty will eventually have the
right to petition for release (one state
Alaskamaintains neither the death penalty nor life imprisonment without parole as sentencing options). Before being granted the privilege of parole, the inmate meets with members of the parole board and is interviewed. The parolee also has a psychological examination. If parole is granted, the inmate must first agree to abide by the conditions of parole set by the paroling authority. While in prison, the inmate signs a parole certificate or contract. On this contract are the conditions that the inmate must follow. These conditions usually require the parolee to meet regularly with their parole officer or community corrections agent, who assesses the behavior and adjustment of the parolee and determines whether the parolee is violating any of their terms of release (typically these include being at home during certain hours which is called a curfew, maintaining steady employment, not
absconding, refraining from illicit drug use and, sometimes, abstaining from
alcohol, attending addiction treatment or counseling, and having no contact with their victim).Violations of these supervision rules, referred to as technical violations, are not criminal offenses, but they can still be punishable with re-incarceration. Since a technical violation is not a new criminal offense; only violations involving new crimes are considered for recidivism rates. During elections, politicians whose administrations parole any large number of prisoners (or, perhaps, one notorious criminal) are typically attacked by their opponents as being "soft on crime". According to the
U.S. Department of Justice, at least sixteen states have removed discretionary parole for most new felony convictions, and four more have abolished parole for certain violent offenders. However, during the rise of mass incarceration in the 1970s, the states that continued to use parole and indeterminate sentencing contributed more to rising incarceration rates than those without parole boards. Said states implemented a dramatic decrease of parole releases, which inevitably resulted in longer sentences for more prisoners. From 1980 to 2009, indeterminate sentencing states made up nine of the ten states with the highest incarceration rate. By 2020, parole populations increased in several states due to overcrowding and emergency responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. Additionally, the process for being granted a commutation has been criticized, as many prisoners have been denied a commutation for not showing the right amount of "remorse" or proving substantially that they were ready to contribute again, which are aspects that many argue are too normative and subjective. Most agree that, as was originally intended, the parole system puts a necessary focus on rehabilitation, despite its current problems which are widely debated. However, critics have noted that high rates of re-incarceration due to technical violations, violations of parole conditions that are not criminal offenses, undermine the rehabilitative goals of parole. and in some states such as Texas, inmates are compensated with "
good time", which is counted towards time served. For example, if an inmate served five years of a ten-year prison term, and also had five years of "good time", they will have completed their sentence "on paper", obliging the state to release them unless deemed a threat to society in writing by the parole board. Mandatory supervision is different from parole in that it is not based on a board's discretion, but instead is legally required once an incarcerated individual's sentence is served. Where parole is granted or denied at the discretion of a parole board, mandatory supervision does not involve a decision-making process: one either qualifies for it or does not. Mandatory supervision tends to involve stipulations that are more lenient than those of parole, and in some cases place no obligations at all on the individual being released.
Racial disparities Evidence shows that within the U.S. parole system there are multiple points of racial disparities involving parole eligibility, decisions regarding release and the loss of parole privileges. The disparities in the system are the results of the racial history in the United States that has led to increased supervision amongst certain racial groups. Consistent data across the states shows that a larger percentage of Black Americans are under parole than White Americans. Between 2001 and 2018, disparities between Black and White Americans in the parole system continued with minimal trends of improvement. Parole of
prisoners of war is "the agreement of persons who have been taken prisoner by an enemy that they will not again take up arms against those who captured them, either for a limited time or during the continuance of the war." In the United States, current policy prohibits US military personnel who are prisoners of war from accepting parole. The
Code of the United States Fighting Force states: "I will accept neither parole nor special favors from the enemy." The position is reiterated by the Department of Defense. "The United States does not authorize any Military Service member to sign or enter into any such parole agreement." ==Outcomes==