Skip to content

News

Electronic Monitoring: the key to 21th century probation?

Electronic monitoring is booming. Probation services in almost all Western European countries are experimenting with it, while probation services in most Eastern European countries are considering pilots. Is this foothold of hi-tech in European probation the beginning of a profound change in probation services? Mike Nellis, professor Criminal and Community Justice at the University of Glasgow, comments.

 

‘In a way, the use of an electronic monitoring programme as a probation tool is inevitable. In every country in Europe society is changing quickly – especially technologically – and probation has to respond to these changes, to modernise its practice. That implies to me that probation should make use of the new care and control techniques that are now available, subject, of course, to ethical considerations. The new global electronic infrastructure means that new opportunities have arisen in the management of offenders.’

Although electronic monitoring programmes are just in an experimental stage, many science-fiction thinkers have fantasised about the future of technological control over offenders. Devices might be developed which will not just register where someone is, but will also ‘act’ to incapacitate them if they break the rules. For instance, an electronic knee lock has been proposed which will force the wearer to kneel if he leaves his house without permission. This form of electronic monitoring does become a substitute for prison bars. ‘That’s very worrying science-fiction thinking’, Nellis says. ‘The producers of electronic monitoring devices have indicated that they are still very far from developing that kind of techniques.’ Hopefully, he says, ‘they will never want to, or be expected to.’

‘Electronic monitoring will never be the probation panacea on its own – it needs to be embedded in rehabilitation programmes. Electronic monitoring programmes help with some offenders; it won’t help with all of them. But probation is always in the business of winning small successes. There are very rarely spectacularly successful results in probation. So anything that helps to win small successes is useful. I firmly believe that electronic monitoring programmes can help to win small successes. Therefore I see electronic monitoring as a key part of the 21st century way of supervising offenders.’

Of course, there’s more to electronic monitoring than simply the technological aspect. For instance: how should it be implemented in respect of probation systems? In England and Wales, the surveillance of people wearing a bracelet is done by private companies, whereas in Sweden, Belgium and Holland it is done by probation services themselves. Nellis: ‘I wouldn’t want a harmonious European model of how to integrate electronic monitoring in probation. There is room for diversity in scope according to what particular countries need. Moreover, all these different approaches and experiences may help each probation service to improve its use of electronic monitoring. Therefore we should tell each other about what we are doing and learn from each other. I think even thirty years from now, it’s highly unlikely that we will all be doing the same thing, but if we haven’t learned from each other, that would be a loss.’

‘From all the systems used now, I personally prefer implementing electronic monitoring within the framework of probation, as is happening in Sweden’, Nellis continues. ‘I would like to think that any probation service can take electronic monitoring into itself and see it as a legitimate extension of its work, and a development of its tradition, rather than as something different and alien. It is not that I would never endorse surveillance being undertaken by private companies. I do believe that there are people in the private sector with a public service ethic. However, the point is that it is harder to get the private sector and the state to work together at ground level than some people think. For that reason, I think developing electronic monitoring within state-run probation services is more simple, more efficient and more modern.’

‘I want to stress that I hope the use of electronic monitoring will develop alongside the traditional 20th century-way of supervising offenders and not instead of it. Traditional forms of probation practice still have a lot to offer. It is important to make relationships with offenders, and to work on restorative justice. We also should not give up on our ideals, for instance reducing the prison population. But to do that, we need to make use of the new options and possibilities that have been created for us in the 21st century. Electronic monitoring is definitely one of these.’

Mike Nellis – mike.nellis@strath.ac.uk

Related News

Keep up to date with the latest developments, stories, and updates on probation from across Europe and beyond. Find relevant news and insights shaping the field today.

Recap

Gender-based violence

Strengthening European Cooperation on Gender-Based Violence in Probation: CEP Meetings Held in Lisbon

10/06/2026

On 8 and 9 June 2026, CEP brought together practitioners, policymakers, researchers and partner organisations in Lisbon for two important meetings focused on strengthening the probation response to gender-based violence across Europe.

New

Overcrowding and Netwidening

Call for nominations Joint Expert Group on Prison Overcrowding and Probation Netwidening (EuroPris & CEP)

09/06/2026

For a new expert group starting in 2026 we are looking for 8 experts (4 from CEP, 4 from EuroPris) interested to join the Joint Expert Group on Prison Overcrowding and Probation Netwidening run in cooperation between CEP and EuroPris.

Recap

Prison, Probation in Europe

CEP at the 31st Council of Europe Conference of Directors of Prison and Probation Services

08/06/2026

CEP participated in the 31st Council of Europe Conference of Directors of Prison and Probation Services (CDPPS), held in Valletta, Malta, on 3–4 June 2026.

New

Caseload and workload

Guidelines on Caseload and Workload

08/06/2026

CEP Expert Group on Caseload and Workload is proud announce the publication of the Guidelines on Caseload and Workload. 

Recap

Prison, Probation in Europe

CEP at the 15th Annual General Meeting of EuroPris

04/06/2026

On 2 June 2026, Jana Špero Kamenjarin, Secretary General CEP, represented CEP at the 15th Annual General Meeting(AGM) of EuroPris in Valletta, hosted by the Maltese Correctional Services Agency.

Recap

Caseload and workload

Recap: Workshop on Caseload and Workload

28/05/2026

On 27 and 28 May 2026, Bucharest hosted the CEP Workshop on Caseload and Workload: Supporting Sustainable Probation Through the Human Dimension. With 40 participants representing 18 European jurisdictions, as well as delegates from South Korea, the workshop offered opportunities to exchange knowledge and develop strategies to manage the increasing caseload and workload in probation. Designed as an interactive space, it provided participants – practitioners, managers, researchers and experts – with reflections on current pressures within probation services and it explored practical, evidence‑informed solutions from across Europe.

Subscribe to our bi-monthly email newsletter!