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Reentry Central is the national website for weekly news and information on criminal justice and reentry.

Welcome to Reentry Central

The National Website on Reentry

Reentry Central is the national website for news and information on the subject of reentry and related criminal justice issues.

 

Reentry Central contains the nation's largest non-governmental database of online information on reentry.

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Each day our editors complete a full national roundup of important news, research, and articles on the field of reentry. The site contains extensive information on:

  • National news and developments in reentry
  • Information on best practices
  • Articles and opinion pieces on reentry and criminal justice reform strategies
  • Available grants and sources of funds for reentry programs
  • Recent professional research in the field

Subscriptions to Reentry Central are available at $35 per year for individual subscriptions, and $100 per year for corporate subscriptions. Corporate subscriptions allow access up to 100 subscriptions delivered to email addresses at the same URL.


 
 

News and Featured Stories
Beatrice Codianni, Managing Editor

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Reentry Central is the nation's leading non-governmental source on reentry news, information, grants, jobs and resources.

 
"They Took My Life Away for Nothing." A Must Read of One Man's Wrongful Conviction
James Carver spent 36 years in prison after he was convicted of setting one of the deadliest fires in Massachusetts history. But after reviewing new scientific evidence, a judge set him free.  Read More   05-17-2025

Federal Judge Removes Rikers Island From City Control
Judge finds "the defendants have consistently fallen short of the requisite compliance with court orders for years"  Read More   05-14-2025

Study: Cash Assistance May Curb Recidivism among People Leaving Prison
The aid can help pay for basic expenses, but not everyone thinks it's money well spent  Read More   05-14-2025

The Forgotten History of Prison Law: Judicial Oversight of Detention Facilities in the Nation’s Early Years
  Read More   05-13-2025

Older People Leaving Prison Tend to Rely on the Parole System to Connect Them to Housing
Often their prior support system can no longer help them or are dead  Read More   05-10-2025

New Report Reveals What the Data Doesn't Show Regarding Pregnancy in Prison
Anecdotal stories over the years suggest that pregnancy behind bars is a harrowing experience at best  Read More   05-10-2025

Corporate Impact in the Age of Racial Equity and Justice Reform
Without the contributions of Black Americans, America and corporate America would not be what it is today  Read More   05-09-2025

Rikers Island Longitudinal Study Shares the Experiences of Defendants Who Have Contact with the Criminal Legal System
Study examines the social and economic lives of people with court involvement  Read More   05-07-2025

Justice Delayed: The Growing Wait for Parole After a Life Sentence
Nearly half of the roughly 200,000 people serving life sentences in 2024 are eligible for parole, but endure extended delays  Read More   05-07-2025

The Dilemma Prison Nurses Face
New York prison nurses must choose between loyalty to guards and devotion to patients  Read More   05-04-2025

How Unreasonable Probation Requirements Are Feeding Jails
Rules that are often ill-conceived and burdensome account for individuals being reincarcerated  Read More   05-03-2025

Opinion: What We Miss When We Talk About Prison Reform
"You can't reform a system unless you admit what it's doing. And what it's doing is disappearing people."  Read More   05-02-2025

On May Day: Captive Labor, Essays on Labor and Incarceration
Organizers, incarcerated authors, and scholars participate in a series on the theme of labor and the carceral state  Read More   05-01-2025

Up the Creek Without a Paddle: Consequences for Failing to Protect Prisoners During a National Disaster
Lack of preparedness and training, underfunding of state and federal programs, and the overcrowding of correctional facilities put people locked up in danger  Read More   04-30-2025

A New Era in Federal Sentencing: Updates to the Guidelines and the Elimination of Departures
Update of United States Sentencing Guidelines will go into effect on November 1, 2025, unless Congress takes action to disapprove the amendments  Read More   04-26-2025

Click here for archived news stories.
Reentry News Videos

Should elderly prisoners get geriatric release?

New Jersey houses almost 1,000 inmates over the age of 60. But while many states offer geriatric parole for aging inmates — New Jersey doesn’t, advocates say — unless a prisoner’s suffering from a terminal illness or permanent disability.

 

How Technical Violations Keep Those on Parole or Probation Stuck

‘We have created a generation of people who have to live their lives on the margins of society, and you can’t be safe on the margins’ — Here’s what technical violations are and why so many people get taken back to jail, not for breaking laws, but for simply breaking the rules.

 

Nonprofits work to end recidivism

Breaking the Chains, another nonprofit working to end recidivism.

 

Criminalizing Homelessness Won't Make It Go Away | NYT Opinion

If you live in one of America’s cities, you probably see homeless people all the time. You might pass them on your way to work. But what if you stopped and listened to what they have to say?

 

At least 210 pregnant people faced criminal charges following Dobbs ruling, report says

A report shows at least 210 people in the U.S. were charged with crimes related to their pregnancies after the Supreme Court's Dobbs ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade, according to a report by Pregnancy Justice.

 

America’s Prison System Problems: Explained

‘Investments in people, not jails and prisons, leads to a decrease in crime’ — We’re breaking down the history and stats behind America’s prison system and the misconceptions that keep incarceration rates growing.

 

 

The hope and belief of The If Project

If there was something someone could have said or done that would have changed the path that led you here, what would it have been?
- Click here to see the video

 

Martin Horn: "Five Research Questions I Want Answered"

The Vera Institute of Justice Research Department Guest Speaker Series featured Martin Horn, distinguished lecturer at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, on April 29, 2010. In this presentation, Horn draws on his extensive experience and insight to highlight key areas in which more research and information could substantially improve the performance of justice institutions like courts, parole, and prisons.
- Click here to see the video

 

New Beginnings, Laurel, MD

Sparks fly as juvenile detainees at New Beginnings Youth Development Center grind and weld rifles into a large peace sign sculpture in this series of welding projects called Guns to Roses.
- Click here to see the video

 

Life in Prison

KPBS, a public service of San Diego State University explores the cost of California's "tough on crime" legislation. This 30 minute documentary gives you an inside look into three state prisons housing the oldest and sickest inmates in the state.
- Click here to see the video

 

Second Thoughts on Three Strikes

Stanford law student brokered a deal with Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office to reduce Norman William's 25 year to life sentence, a move that may be pivotal in an upcoming election. - The New York Times Magazine
- Click here to see the video

 

  Click here for our video archives.  

More News

For the most recent news and developments related to prisoner reentry, please visit our "News" section which is updated daily and emailed weekly to our mailing list.

About Reentry Central

Reentry Central - About Us


The mission of Reentry Central is to provide a centralized national news and information site for professionals in the fields of criminal justice reform and successful reintegration into society. Its intent is to foster the improvement of criminal justice techniques designed to decrease the use of incarceration, and to help provide more effective reentry services.


Reentry Central is a national organization providing the latest information and best practices for ending mass incarceration and promoting successful reentry.

 

   Beatrice Codianni
   Co-Founder/Executive Director/Managing Editor     
Beatrice Codianni
Co-Founder/Executive Director/Managing Editor
Bcodianni@reentrycentral.net

Reentry Central - Beatrice Codianni - Co-Founder

A political/community activist for over 50 years, Beatrice has been a part of many diverse social justice movements. Certified in Community Mediation and HIV/AIDS Outreach Education, she has also worked extensively with disenfranchised youth, creating and implementing programs in the areas of education, employment, mental and physical health, and violence reduction.

Beatrice brings to Reentry Central firsthand experience in the criminal justice system, having been incarcerated by the Federal Bureau of Prisons for 15 years. While incarcerated, Beatrice served as a consultant to the Director of the University of Connecticut's Institute for Violence Reduction, and spent her time advocating for incarcerated women. A member of the Danbury (Prison) AIDS Awareness Group, Beatrice taught an AIDS education course, and used her Literacy Volunteers of America training to help teach reading skills to those she was incarcarated with.

While incarcerated, she became friends with Piper Kerman, author of Orange is the New Black, and is referred to as "Esposito" in her book. Beatrice is the co-founder of The Real Women of Orange is the New Black, an organization that seeks to educate high school, college students and others about the harsh truths behind the over incarceration of woman and girls in America. Beatrice speaks nationally on this issue.

Beatrice took courses in Business Management with Legal Application that were provided by Marist College at the Federal Prison in Danbury. Beatrice successfully completed the first National Online Certificate Course in Reentry offered by the Prison Reentry Institute of John Jay College of Criminal Justice. Beatrice is a founding member of the National Council for Incarcerated and Formerly Incarcerated Women and Girls. She is also a founding member of the CT Bail Fund. In 2016, Beatrice, founded Sex Workers and Allies Network (SWAN), a harm reduction organization committed to the voices and needs of people involved in survival sex work. In 2017, she was chosen by JustLeadershipUSA as a Living with Conviction Fellow. Additionally, in 2021 Beatrice became a founding member of the CT Harm Reduction Alliance. She is a native of New Haven, CT currently residing in Florida.

 



Sonia Howe
Co-Founder/Webmaster
administrator@reentrycentral.net

Sonia has been in the IT profession since the early 90's and has worked as an Implementation Specialist and Integration Engineer for various Companies throughout her career.


Sonia has become an advocate for ending mass incarceration and helping formerly incarcarated women find jobs and reintegrating into society. She is a co-founder of Reentry Central in 2009 and resided in the Carolinas.

 



 

 

Library of Resources

The Reentry Central Library is intended to be a ready resource for professionals and others interested in the field of prisoner reentry. The aim of this library is to provide a succinct compendium of the leading articles, research studies, and profiles of best practices in the field. If you know of a resource which deserves to be listed on our library, please email us with your suggestion, and we will evaluate it for inclusion into our library. We look forward to receiving your suggestions.

library@reentrycentral.net

List of Resources

(Accreditation) Betraying the Promise of Accreditation: Quis Custodiet Ipsos Custodes?
"Organizations like the American Correctional Association (ACA) and National Commission on Correctional Health Care (NCCHC) champion high standards for conditions of confinement and medical treatment for prisoners, respectively, and provide accreditation to facilities that meet those standards. Often, however, accreditation supplies little more than a thin veneer of respectability that glosses over constitutional violations and other abuses."   View Link

(Aging) The Impact of an Aging Inmate Population on the Federal Bureau of Prisons
"The OIG found that aging inmates are more costly to incarcerate than their younger counterparts due to increased medical needs. We further found that limited institution staff and inadequate staff training affect the BOP’s ability to address the needs of aging inmates. The physical infrastructure of BOP institutions also limits the availability of appropriate housing for aging inmates. Further, the BOP does not provide programming opportunities designed specifically to meet the needs of aging inmates. We also determined that aging inmates engage in fewer misconduct incidents while incarcerated and have a lower rate of re-arrest once released; however, BOP policies limit the number of aging inmates who can be considered for early release and, as a result, few are actually released early."   View Link

(Ban the Box) Ban the Box, Criminal Records, and Statistical Discrimination: A Field Experiment
“Ban-the-Box” (BTB) policies restrict employers from asking about applicants’ criminal histories on job applications and are often presented as a means of reducing unemployment among black men, who disproportionately have criminal records. However, withholding information about criminal records could risk encouraging statistical discrimination: employers may make assumptions about criminality based on the applicant’s race. To investigate this possibility as well as the effects of race and criminal records on employer callback rates, we sent approximately 15,000 fictitious online job applications to employers in New Jersey and New York City, in waves before and after each jurisdiction’s adoption of BTB policies. Our causal effect estimates are based on a triple-differences design, which exploits the fact that many businesses’ applications did not ask about records even before BTB and were thus unaffected by the law."   View Link

(Disabilities) Disabled Behind Bars: The Mass Incarceration of People With Disabilities in America’s Jails and Prisons
"People with disabilities are thus dramatically overrepresented in the nation’s prisons and jails today. According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, people behind bars in state and federal prisons are nearly three times as likely to report having a disability as the nonincarcerated population, those in jails are more than four times as likely.6 Cognitive disabilities—such as Down syndrome, autism, dementia, intellectual disabilities, and learning disorders—are among the most commonly reported: Prison inmates are four times as likely and jail inmates more than six times as likely to report a cognitive disability than the general population.People with mental health conditions comprise a large proportion of those behind bars, as well. The Bureau of Justice Statistics reports that fully 1 in 5 prison inmates have a serious mental illness."   View Link

(Drug Arrests) Crime, Arrests, and US Law Enforcement
Drug War Facts reports that police officers arrest more than 1.2 million people a year in the United States on charges of illegal drug possession   View Link

(Substance Abuse) 2011 SAMHSA Survey Results on Drug Use and Health
The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) issued a new report, Results from the 2011 Survey on Drug Use and Health: Summary of National Findings, based on a survey of over 67.000 people concerning their use of tobacco, alcohol and illicit drugs. While this survey was not offered to incarcerated individuals, those working with individuals with a criminal history might find it useful in their work.   View Link

A Call to Action: Safeguarding New York's Children of Incarcerated Parents
An Osborne Association report that details the negative, and sometimes, life-long effects parental incarceration can have on a child. The report makes several recommendations that law enforcement agencies, working in conjunction with children and family aid agencies, can do to protect these children.   View Link

A Case Study of 8 American Cities (How Reducing Violent Crime Raises the Economy)
A Center for American Progress report that looks at the economic costs of violent crime   View Link

A Matter of Time: The Causes and Consequences of Rising Time Served in America's Prisons
Attempts to end mass incarceration have largely focused on reforms for nonviolent and less serious convictions, but that won’t be enough.   View Link

A New Approach to Reducing Incarceration While Maintaining Low Rates of Crime
Of this report The Hamilton Project states: "We propose that states introduce a greater degree of discretion into their sentencing and parole practices through two specific reforms: (1) a reduction in the scope and severity of truth-in-sentencing laws that mandate that inmates serve minimum proportions of their sentences, and (2) a reworking and, in many instances, abandonment of mandatory minimum sentences. We also propose that states create incentives for localities to limit their use of state prison systems."   View Link

A Reentry Education Model: Supporting Education and Career Advancement for Low-Skill Individuals in Corrections
The U.S. Department of Education has released a report concerning the creation of a correctional education reentry model that will bring community-based educational and job training programs into a correctional setting in an effort to provide inmates with the skills they need to be employment-ready when they are released.   View Link

A Toolkit for Status Offense System Reform
The Vera Institute’s Center for Youth Justice Status Offense Reform Center (SORC) has developed A Toolkit for Status Offense System Reform. The purpose of the toolkit is simple: to provide the guidance and tools you need to create—outside of the juvenile justice system—an approach for responding to and serving youth charged with status offenses in the community.   View Link

Addicted to Courts: How a Growing Dependence on Drug Courts Impacts People and Communities
A Justice Policy Institute that examines the effectiveness of drug courts   View Link

Addressing the Collateral Consequences of Convictions for Young Offenders
Dr. Ashley Nellis, research analyst for the Sentencing Project, provides a comprehensive discussion of the impact of a conviction for young people who break the law. This includes bans on accessing education, housing, and public benefits, as well as placement on various community notification registries. Dr Nellis offers suggestions on how the juvenile justice system can get back to its roots of rehabilitation, not sanctions.   View Link

Adults With Behavioral Health Needs Under Correctional Supervision: A Shared Framework for Reducing Recidivism and Promoting Recovery
Council of State Governments Justice Center report designed for professionals working with corrections-involved clients who have “substance abuse issues or mental health disorders   View Link

Advancing the Quality of Cost-Benefit Analysis for Justice Programs Carl Matthies
Vera Institute gathered some of the best minds together in 2012 to form the Cost-Benefits Methods Working Group (CBMWG). The group was charged with promoting the use of Cost-Benefit Analysis (CBA) in criminal justice policy making decisions. CBMWG helped to produce a white paper that Vera Institute published in March 2014.   View Link

Aging in Prison: Reducing Elder Incarceration and Promoting Public Safety
This policy document, published by the Center for Justice at Columbia University and edited by Samuel Roberts, Associate Professor of History at Columbia University and director for the Institute for Research in African American Studies, is the result of the 2014 symposium hosted by the Mailman School of Public Health/Columbia University and organized by the Center for Justice, the Osborne Association, the Correctional Association of New York, Release Aging People in Prison/RAPP, Be the Evidence Project/Fordham, and the Florence V. Burden Foundation. The symposium examined the growing numbers of aging people in prison, their prison conditions, their transition back into the community and the need to increase the release of aging people who pose little or no public safety risk. This is a critical part of reducing mass incarceration and of creating a more fair, just and humane justice system.   View Link

America's Toxic Prisons: The Environmental Injustices of Mass Incarceration
Report underscores the correlation between environmental justice and criminal justice   View Link

An Overview of Mandatory Minimum Penalties in the Federal Criminal Justice System (2017 Overview)
Report examines the use of federal mandatory minimum penalties and the impact of those penalties on the federal prison population.   View Link

At America's Expense: The Mass Incarceration of the Elderly
An ACLU report on thigh cost of incarcerating the elderly in America.   View Link

Attitudes of US Voters Toward Non-Serious Offenders and Alternatives to Incarceration
A large number of Americans support alternatives to incarceration for non-violent, non-serious offenses.   View Link

Back to School Guide for Formerly Incarcerated Persons
John Jay College of Criminal Justice, Prison Reentry Institute created a planning and information guide for formerly incarcerated persons who would like to continue their education. The guide provides a wealth of information on a variety of topics related to going back to school after imprisonment.   View Link

Bail Fail: Why the U.S. Should End the Practice of Money for Bail
Justice Policy Institute explains why the U.S. should rethink its bail system policy.   View Link

Banking on Bondage: Private Prisons and Mass Incarceration
The ACLU examines private prisons in America. The report is divided into three parts. Part one follows the rise in private prisons since the 1980’s. Part two exposes the myth that privatization is a safe and cost effective way to incarcerate individuals, and part three reveals how private prison companies use cunning strategies to win support to build, or take over, more and more prisons.   View Link

Better Solutions for Youth with Mental Health Needs in the Juvenile Justice System
The paper, “Better Solutions for Youth with Mental Health Needs in the Juvenile Justice System,” tackles the issues of mental health screenings, diversion strategies, mental health training for those working with adolescents, evidence based practices, training and resources for getting families involved, and juvenile competency.   View Link

Black Girls Matter: Pushed Out, Overpoliced, and Underprotected,
The African American Policy Forum report, Black Girls Matter: Pushed Out, Overpoliced, and Underprotected, examined data from public schools in Boston and New York City and found discrepancies in treatment toward African American girls.   View Link

Breaking Down Mass Incarceration in the 2010 Census: State-by-State Incarceration Rates by Race/Ethnicity
The Prison Policy Initiative report “Breaking Down Mass Incarceration in the 2010 Census: State-by-State Incarceration Rates by Race/Ethnicity” allows easy access to the racial and ethnic rates of prisons and jails in all 50 states.   View Link

Breaking Schools’ Rules: A Statewide Study of How School Discipline Relates to Students’ Success and Juvenile Justice Involvement
A Council of State Governments and the Public Policy Research Institute of Texas A & M University report on the heavy consequences suffered by students expelled or suspended from school as it relates to the juvenile justice system.   View Link

Brennan Center Highlights Impact of Criminal Records on the Economy
Response by the Brennan Center to the solicitation of comments by the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights focus on discrimination, and the negative impact on the economy and public safety.   View Link

Broken Records: How Errors by Criminal Background Checking Companies Harm Workers and Businesses
The National Consumer Law Center report reveals the negative impact inaccurate information can have on job seekers, businesses and the economy.   View Link

Campaign for Youth Justice Youth Justice System Survey
Survey finds most Americans support youth justice system reform.   View Link

Childhood Disrupted: Understanding the Effects of Maternal Incarceration
Volunteers of America put together a study that examines how the incarceration rate of mothers has steadily risen, and the effect maternal incarceration has on children of the inmates.   View Link

Childhood Reports of Food Neglect and Impulse Control Problems and Violence in Adulthood
Food insecurity and hunger during childhood are associated with an array of developmental problems in multiple domains, including impulse control problems and violence.   View Link

Childhood Trauma and Its Effects: Implications for Police
The National Institute of Justice released a paper that discusses how repeated trauma affects young children and how police departments can train their officers to recognize the signs of trauma in young children and teenagers therey being more effective in reducing mental health problems in the community, and being perceived as less threatening in the eyes of traumatized young people.   View Link

Children of Incarcerated Parents Fact Sheet
National Resource Center on Children and Families of the Incarcerated fact sheet   View Link

Children on the Outside: Voicing the Pain and Human Costs of Parental Incarceration
An informative report on the hidden, and not so hidden, problems that children of incarcerated parents face.   View Link

Children’s Exposure to Violence and the Intersection Between Delinquency and Victimization
A new study from the National Survey of Children’s Exposure to Violence underscores the importance for early intervention of childhood exposure to violence to prevent these children from future delinquency (also referred to in other studies as “bullying”). This study offers a new look at the relationship between victimization and delinquency for children 10 to 17 years-old and through four different categories.   View Link

Closing the Gap: Using Criminal Justice and Public Health Data to Improve the Identification of Mental Illness
Vera Institute’s Substance Use and Mental Health program poured over data collected in 2008 from four Washington, D.C. criminal justice agencies and the Department of Mental Health to determine the mental health needs of arrestees and to assess if those needs were being met.   View Link

Collateral Consequences of Arrests and Convictions under D.C., Maryland, and Virginia Law
The Washington Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights and Urban Affairs report finds, "The problem of collateral consequences of arrest and conviction – penalties that are imposed not by penal laws or sentences but by ancillary rules, statutes, or practices that make it harder to get a job, housing, and other necessities – is significant and growing in DC, Maryland and Virginia."   View Link

Collateral Costs: Incarceration's Effect on Economic Mobility
A report by Pew's Economic Policy Group and the Pew Center on the States looks at the many collateral costs of incarcerating 2.3 million Americans, particularly the impact on economic mobility.   View Link

Collateral Damage: Incarceration of Veterans
An article by Michael J. Fitzpatrick of the National Alliance on Mental Health (NAMI), and Tracy Velazquez,of the Justice Policy Institute (JPI),on the reasons veterans get involved in criminal behavior, and how those of us concerned with criminal justice reform might step outside the boundaries of our normal reentry activities to give support to veterans organizations who aim to keep veterans from committing crimes in the first place.   View Link

Comeback Kids: School Suspension and High School Graduation
Those who drop out of school after being suspended have less chance of obtaining middle class status as adults.   View Link

Coming Home and No Place to Live
Coming Home and No Place to Live: Understanding Perceptions Among Public Housing Residents about the Reintergration of Formerly Incarcerated Individuals to These Locations is a Harlem Community and Academic Partnership study study that asked residents to participate in research that sought to determine what, if any, barriers to reentry they believed their neighbors were facing.   View Link

Connecticut Regional Institute for the 21st Century: Assessment of Connecticut's Correction, Parole and Probation Systems
A comprehensive research report on the Connecticut Criminal Justice System.   View Link

Continuing Fiscal Crisis in Corrections - Setting a New Course
Staff from Vera’s Center on Sentencing and Corrections assessed spending plans for fiscal year 2011 and reviewed state legislative action over the preceding decade to identify trends in corrections policies. The resulting report can help legislators and other policy makers understand states’ responses both to the fiscal crisis and to unsatisfactory outcomes of earlier corrections policies and investments. An interactive map and chart show related data about states’ corrections appropriations in fiscal year 2011 and changes since the previous year.   View Link

Correctional Population in the United States
U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics report on decline of prison population during Fiscal Year 2010   View Link

Corrections: Countering Staff Stress—Why and How
"The topic of correctional staff wellness is attracting greater attention from agency leadership and staff around the country. In response to this interest, the National Institute of Corrections (NIC) has been working with a variety of providers and stakeholders to develop methods to support the health and wellness of correctional staff and their organizations."   View Link

Cost-Benefit Analysis: A Guide for Drug Courts and Other Criminal Justice Programs
The National Institute of Justice writes: Cost-benefit analysis (CBA) can help practitioners and policymakers make choices about how to use limited resources. CBA is used to evaluate the impacts a service or program has on society, whether positive or negative. The results of CBA are estimated societal benefits. While these might not correlate with estimated fiscal benefits, they can allow policymakers to compare two programs to decide which has the better impact on society. Learn how you can use CBA to estimate and value the impact of your drug court or other criminal justice program with our latest Research in Brief.   View Link

Cost-Effectiveness of Diacetylmorphine Versus Methadone for Chronic Opioid Dependence Refractory to Treatment
A Canadian study shows that "intractable" addicts can benefit from a clinically supervised medical heroin program.   View Link

Council of State Governments Justice Center: States Report Reductions in Recidivism
A September 25, 2012 Council of State Governments (CSG) Justice Center’s National Reentry Resource Center (NRRC) policy brief detailing how several states successfully reduced recidivism. CSG claims that bipartisan co-operation in Kansas, Michigan, Mississippi, Ohio, Oregon, Texas, and Vermont allowed important legislation to be passed, thereby bringing about “significant reductions in recidivism.”   View Link

Cracked Justice
The Sentencing Project report on the fight to fix state laws that still include sentencing disparities between crack cocaine and powder cocaine convictions.   View Link

Creating Employment )pportunities for Low-Income African American Men
While many are heralding the drop in the national black male unemployment rate, which recently fell below 10 percent for the first time in seven years, joblessness remains much higher in many poor African American communities. For many low-income black men, especially in places like inner-city Baltimore, finding and keeping work is a constant struggle, never far from their minds.   View Link

Crime in 2015: A Preliminary Analysis
This report provides a preliminary in-depth look at current national crime rates. It provides data on crime and murder for the 30 largest U.S. cities by population in 2015 and compares that to historical data. This analysis relies on data collected from the Federal Bureau of Investigation and local police departments. The authors were able to obtain preliminary 2015 murder statistics from 25 police departments in the nation’s 30 largest cities and broader crime data from 19 of the 30. The data covers the period from January 1 to October 1, 2015. As this report relies on initial data and projects crime data for the remainder of the year, its findings should be treated as preliminary as they may change when final figures are available.   View Link

Criminal Justice Debt: A Barrier to Reentry
The Brennan Center for Justice reports that while debtors' prisons are unconstitutional, some states put formerly incarcerated persons back in prison if they cannot pay their legal debts.   View Link

Criminal Justice Trends: Key Legislative Changes in Sentencing Policy, 2001 - 2010
Since 2001, many state legislatures have changed their criminal sentencing policies, increasingly emphasizing approaches that are “smart on crime.” The three main areas of legislative reform involve redefining and reclassifying criminal offenses, strengthening alternatives to incarceration, and reducing prison terms. This report is a reference for legislators, their staff, and other policy makers who may be considering or implementing similar changes in sentencing statutes and policies.   View Link

Criminal Stigma, Race, Gender and Employment: An Expanded Assessment of the Consequences of Imprisonment for Employment
This study sought a broader understanding of how race and ethnicity interact with a prior criminal record to affect an individual’s employment prospects. The authors examined whether having a criminal record affects hiring decisions, whether the applicant’s race or ethnicity influences hiring decisions, and whether the effect of a criminal record varies depending on the applicant’s race or ethnicity. The authors found differences by race and ethnicity, with blacks and Hispanics generally faring more poorly than whites. They also found that a prison record has a dampening effect on job prospects, particularly in the low-skill food service sector, where ex-prisoners are likely to seek employment. The employer survey revealed that employers associate prison time with a number of negative work-related characteristics and that they prefer to hire individuals with no criminal justice contact.   View Link

Cutting Corrections Costs: Earned Time Policies for State Prisoners
A National Council of State Legislatures report that describes the types of earned credit, and also provides information on why earned credit is beneficial, both financially, and as a matter of public safety.   View Link

Data-Driven Decision Making for Strategic Justice Reinvestment
Urban Institute Policy Brief   View Link

Designing Innovative Solutions for Programs Supported by the Administration for Children and Families
The average incarcerated noncustodial parent leaves prison with more than $20,000 in unpaid child support, which poses a serious barrier to reentering society and securing regular employment after release. Additionally, these individuals are typically unable to meet most of their monthly financial obligations because they are unlikely to have either earnings or income while in prison. This inability to make child support payments, in turn, affects the state child support agencies’ federal performance outcomes. As such, the majority of states have adjusted their laws to allow incarcerated noncustodial parents to apply for modifications to their child support orders.   View Link

Deterrence in Criminal Justice: Evaluating Certainty vs. Severity of Punishment
According to the Sentencing Project, research shows that increasingly long prison terms do not produce greater deterrent effects and that even incapacitation—preventing future criminal offending—becomes less significant as prisoners get older. Further, the behavior of incarcerated prisoners is likely to be predictive of their behavior on release. Programs targeted at assisting long-term prisoners during incarceration may strengthen public safety.   View Link

Disabilities Among Prison and Jail Inmates, 2011–12
In 2011–12, about 3 in 10 state and federal prisoners and 4 in 10 local jail inmates reported having at least one disability. Among prison and jail inmates, females were more likely to report a disability than males. About 40% of females and 31% of males in prison and 49% of females and 39% of males in jail reported a disability. In this report, disability types include hearing, vision, cognitive, ambulatory, self-care, and independent living, which refers to the ability to navigate daily life schedules, activities, and events without assistance.   View Link

Disproportionate Impact of K-12 School Suspension and Expulsion on Black Students in Southern States
This report aims to make transparent the rates at which school discipline practices and policies impact Black students in every K-12 public school district in 13 Southern states: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and West Virginia. Despite comprising only 20.9% of students in the 3,022 districts analyzed, Blacks were suspended and expelled at disproportionately high rates.   View Link

Doe Fund Guide to Hiring Qualified People with Convictions in New York
Tips on how to fairly evaluate a job applicant can be used in other states   View Link

Drug War Détente? A Review of State-Level Drug Law Reform , 2009 – 2013
From 2009 through 2013, more than 30 states passed nearly 50 bills reforming how their criminal justice systems define and enforce drug offenses. In reviewing this legislative activity, Vera’s Center on Sentencing and Corrections found that most efforts have focused on making change in one or a combination of the following five areas: Repealing or limiting mandatory penalties, Modifying drug sentencing schemes, Expanding access to early release mechanisms, Expanding or strengthening community-based sanctions, and ameliorating collateral consequences   View Link

Education Under Arrest: The Case Against Police in Schools
A report issued by the Justice Policy Institute reveals that when schools have law enforcement on site, students are more likely to get arrested by police instead of having discipline handled by school officials. This leads to more kids being funneled into the juvenile justice system, which is both expensive and associated with negativea impact on youth.   View Link

Electronic Monitoring Is Not the Answer: Critical Reflections on a Flawed Alternative
This report offers a critical assessment of electronic monitoring (EM) in the criminal justice system. The author, who spent a year on an ankle bracelet as a condition of his own parole, draws on his in-depth study of legislation, policies, contracts, and academic literature related to electronic monitoring. In addition, he interviewed people directly impacted by EM in four states. These included those who had been on the monitor, their family members, corrections officials, and the CEO of a monitoring company. The report rejects any simplistic rush to deploy electronic monitors as an alternative to incarceration. Instead, the document sets out critical conditions for EM to be a genuine alternative.   View Link

Employing Your Mission: Building Cultural Competence in Reentry Service Agencies
The full title of this collaborative effort between The Fortune Society and the Prison Reentry Institute at John Jay college is Employing Your Mission: Building Cultural Competence in Reentry Service Agencies Through the Hiring of Individuals who are Formerly Incarcerated and/or in Recovery This toolkit outlines how organizations can successfully employ men and women with criminal histories. The toolkit was praised by U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder as "a national model for reentry agencies."   View Link

Engaging Disconnected Young People in Education and Work
Educational attainment and early work experience provide a crucial foundation for future success. However, many young adults are disconnected from both school and the job market. Neglecting these young people can exact a heavy toll on not only the individuals but also society as a whole, for example, through lost productivity and tax contributions, increased dependence on public assistance, and higher rates of criminal activity.   View Link

Enhancing Linkages to HIV Primary Care and Services in Jail Settings Initiative: Transitional Care Coordination - From Incarceration to the Community
How Corrections and the Community can collaborate to help HIV+ inmates transition back to the community, and provide necessary services.   View Link

Entrepreneurship and Prisoner Reentry: The Development of a Concept
Supporting formerly incarcerated persons in their effort to become self-employed can reduce recidivism,cut back welfare rolls and aid the economy.   View Link

Evaluation of the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction and Corporation for Supportive Housing's Pilot Program: Interim Rearrest Analysis
An Urban Institute Research Report to ascertain if the availability supportive housing for newly released prisoners can cut down the recidivism rate.   View Link

Evaluation of the Re-Integration of Ex-Offenders (RExO) Program: Two-Year Impact Report
Evaluation shows mixed results for Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration, and the Department of Justice initiative.   View Link

Ex-Offenders and the Labor Market
A Center for Economic and Policy Research report that looks at how the U.S. loses up to $65 billion a year in lost output because convicted felons have a difficult time obtaining employment.   View Link

Exploring the Role of the Police in Prisoner Reentry
A paper issued by the National Institute of Justice suggests that police can take a more active role in promoting public safety. Community policing programs are gaining attention as a method to reduce crime. Jeremy Travis, Ronald Davis and Sarah Lawrence write that when police engage with reentry initiatives, recidivism rates can be reduced.   View Link

Fact Sheet on Parents in Prison
Sentencing Project fact sheet on parents in prison also provides a list of “missed opportunities for intervention,” before and after incarceration.   View Link

Failed Policies, Forfeited Futures: A Nationwide Scorecard on Juvenile Records
Read Failed Policies, Forfeited Futures: A Nationwide Scorecard on Juvenile Records, is the first-ever comprehensive evaluation of state policies that govern the confidentiality and expungement of juvenile court and law enforcement records. No state earned the maximum five-star rating, with the national average coming in at three stars out of the possible five stars.   View Link

FAQ: Communities and Families Involved with the Criminal Justice System
The National Reentry Resource Center's Committee on Communities and Families has put together a lists of Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) for those who are, or were, involved in the criminal justice system, their families and friends, community members and reentry professionals.   View Link

Fenced In: HIV/AIDS in the US Criminal Justice System
Gay Men’s Health Crisis, Inc. (GMHC) has issued a new and detailed report on HIV/AIDS in prison, demonstrating that even though the death and infection rates among inmates have declined, HIV/AIDS still exists, and existing issues deserve further attention.   View Link

Findings on Best Practices of Community Re-entry Programs for Previously Incarcerated Persons
Research on program models and best practices of programs serving formerly incarcerated persons.   View Link

Firearm Homicide and Other Causes of Death in Delinquents: A 16-Year Prospective Study
Delinquent youth are at risk for early violent death after release from detention. However, few studies have examined risk factors for mortality. Previous investigations studied only serious offenders (a fraction of the juvenile justice population) and provided little data on females.   View Link

First Annual Report of the New York City Young Men’s Initiative
Created by NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg, the Young Men's Initiative is designed to give young men of color opportunities that will allow them to succeed, and in doing so stay out of the criminal justice system.   View Link

First Do No Harm: Advancing Public Health in Policing Practices
Millions of medically vulnerable and socially marginalized people cycle through the criminal justice system each year because of serious structural problems entrenched in American society. The absence of a coherent and effective social safety net means that individuals lack access to health care, mental health care, social services, and housing options in their communities. In cities and communities across the nation, police act as reluctant social workers without the benefit of training and treatment providers of last resort for people with chronic, unmet health and social service needs. They must assume these roles because of laws and policies that have criminalized quality-of-life offenses and minor drug-related behaviors, with the greatest burden falling upon the poor and communities of color.   View Link

For Better or for Profit: How the Bail Bonding Industry Stands in the Way of Fair and Effective Pretrial Justice
Another Justice Policy Institute report that concludes that the bail bonding system keeps low-income individuals in jail for long periods of time because they cannot afford to pay for their release and at the expense of taxpayers.   View Link

Freedom to Thrive: Reimagining Safety and Security in Our Communities
The Freedom to Thrive report examines racial disparities, policing landscapes, and budgets in twelve jurisdictions across the country   View Link

From Classroom to Community
Education, both in-prison and post release, can have an effect on recidivism.   View Link

From Protection to Punishment: Post Conviction Barriers for Domestic Violence Survivors-Defendants In New York State
A report by the Avon Global Center for Women and Justice at Cornell Law School and the Women in Prison Project of the Correctional Association of New York.   View Link

Gaming the System: How the Political Strategies of Private Prison Companies Promote Ineffective Incarceration Policies
New report by the Justice Policy Institute highlights political strategies of companies working to make money through harsh policies and longer sentences.   View Link

Gang Prevention: An Overview of Research and Programs
This Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention bulletin examines gangs, and provides answers to questions such as why young people join gangs, and to how communities can prevent young people from becoming gang members.   View Link

GAO Report to Congress: Bureau of Prisons, Growing Inmate Crowding Negatively Affects Inmates, Staff and Infrastucture
The growth in the federal prison population is largely due to the high number of federal prisoners sentenced under harsh drug laws.   View Link

GAO Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act Report
Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act Report: Jurisdictions Face Challenges to Implementing the Act, and Stakeholders Report Positive and Negative Effects. A GAO report “covering issues related to implementation of the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA)."   View Link

Girlhood Interrupted: The Erasure of Black Girls’ Childhood
A groundbreaking study by Georgetown Law’s Center on Poverty and Inequality finds that adults view black girls as less innocent and more adult-like than their white peers, especially in the age range of 5-14. The study is the first of its kind to focus on girls, and builds on previous research on adult perceptions of black boys. That includes a 2014 study led by Phillip Goff that found that, beginning at age 10, black boys are more likely to be viewed as older and guilty of suspected crimes than white peers.   View Link

Going it Alone: The Story of the Intensive Alternative to Custody Pilots
The prison population in England and Wales exploded in 2007, causing the National Offender Management Service (NOMS) to take action to reduce the number of inmates in the criminal justice system of those two countries. As an executive agency of the Ministry of Justice, NOMS goals are twofold: to keep correctional costs down, and to rehabilitate prisoners.   View Link

Got Clean Slate? New Study Suggests that Criminal Record Clearing May Increase Earnings
Abstract: The staggering impacts of the decades-long wars on crime and drugs are well-known. Almost seven million Americans – one in 35 adults – are incarcerated or under correctional supervision (Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2013). As many as one in four adult Americans has a criminal record, mostly for arrests and misdemeanors (NELP, 2011). By age 23, almost half of all African American men, more than a third of white men, and almost one in eight women have been arrested (Brame, et al., 2014). Arrest, conviction and incarceration records create collateral consequences that too often serve as a lifelong obstacle to employment, education, housing, public benefits and civic participation (National Institute of Justice, 2013).   View Link

Guide For New York State Employers
This guide explains the law and provides guidance to employers on how to apply Article 23-A when making hiring decisions.It also relates how companies can better protect their businesses from negligent hiring claims.   View Link

Healing a Broken System: Veterans and the War on Drugs
This report examines the plight of returning veterans who struggle with incarceration and psychological wounds of war such as addiction and post-traumatic stress disorder – and suggests reforms that could improve the health and preserve the freedom of American soldiers returning from war zones and transitioning back to civilian life.   View Link

Health and Prisoner Reentry: How Physical, Mental and Substance Abuse Conditions Shape the Process of Reentry
Recognizing and correcting obstacles to reentry.   View Link

Healthy Communities May Make Safe Communities: Public Health Approaches to Violence Prevention
A National Institute of Justice article, Healthy Communities May Make Safe Communities: Public Health Approaches to Violence Prevention, discusses how collaborations between public health and public safety organizations have proven successful in preventing crime and reducing violence.   View Link

Helping At-Risk Youth Say "No" to Gangs
An NIJ-funded evaluation finds that a revised curriculum and greater attention to teacher training have resulted in an improved program for preventing gang membership and delinquency.   View Link

HIV Among Transgender People
"...Factors that contribute to high rates of HIV among transgender people include drug and alcohol abuse, mental health disorders, incarceration, homelessness, unemployment, lack of familial support, violence, stigma, discrimination, limited health care access, and negative health care encounters."   View Link

HIV in Prisons, 2001 - 2010
A Bureau of Justice Statistics report announcing that the rate of HIV/AIDS and AIDS related deaths have declined from 2001 through 2010. The report was written by BJS statistician Laura M. Maruschak.   View Link

HIV, Prisoners, and Human Rights
"Worldwide, a disproportionate burden of HIV, tuberculosis, and hepatitis is present among current and former prisoners. This problem results from laws, policies, and policing practices that unjustly and discriminatorily detain individuals and fail to ensure continuity of prevention, care, and treatment upon detention, throughout imprisonment, and upon release. These government actions, and the failure to ensure humane prison conditions, constitute violations of human rights to be free of discrimination and cruel and inhuman treatment, to due process of law, and to health."   View Link

How Medicaid Enrollment of Inmates Facilitates Health Coverage After Release
Because of the extensive and, in some cases, communicable health conditions of many inmates, officials recognize that facilitating seamless access to health care upon re-entry into society improves the individuals’ prospects for successful reintegration and benefits the public’s health and safety. Offenders frequently enter jail or prison with a substance use disorder and/or a mental illness and have high rates of chronic medical conditions (such as hypertension and diabetes) and infectious diseases (such as HIV and hepatitis C). Care continuity can be especially critical with the treatment of behavioral health conditions.   View Link

How the Fortune Society Achieved a Triple Bottom Line with Castle Gardens
The Fortune Society Offers a Toolkit on Successful Transitional Housing for Individuals with a Criminal Background   View Link

How to Safely Reduce Prison Populations and Support People Returning to Their Communities
The Justice Policy Institute issued a fact sheet In June 2010 which proposes that effective programs can save taxpayers money and reduce the incarceration rate while providing public safety.   View Link

Implications of Federal Health Legislation on Justice-Involved Populations
A Justice Center Council of State Governments FAQ on what the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act will mean for formerly incarcerated persons in need of medical care.   View Link

Improving Strategic Planning Through Collaborative Bodies
Urban Institute Policy Brief   View Link

In For A Penny: The Rise of America's New Debtors' Prisons
The ACLU reports that those who are unable to pay their legal debts when they are released from prison are sent back, creating the reemergence of debtors' prisons   View Link

In Our Backyard – Overcoming Community Resistance to Reentry Housing
A toolkit that helps organizations seeking to provide safe and affordable housing for formerly incarcerated persons. This collaborative effort by the Prison Reentry Institute at John Jay College and the Fortune Society was praised by U.S. Attorney General Holder as being a model for other organizations to follow.   View Link

In Our Own Backyard: Confronting Growth and Disparities in American Jails
Although jails are the “front door” to mass incarceration, there is not enough data for justice system stakeholders and others to understand how their jail is being used and how it compares with others.To address this issue, Vera researchers developed a data tool that includes the jail population and jail incarceration rate for every U.S. county that uses a local jail. Researchers merged jail data from two federal data collections—the Bureau of Justice Statistics Annual Survey of Jails and Census of Jails—and incorporated demographic data from the U.S. Census.   View Link

Injury Prevention & Control : Division of Violence Prevention (Adverse Childhood Experience Study)
The Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Study is one of the largest investigations ever conducted to assess associations between childhood maltreatment and later-life health and well-being. The study is a collaboration between the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Kaiser Permanente's Health Appraisal Clinic in San Diego.   View Link

Inventorying Housing for Reintegrating People
Concerned that some people released from prison were being sent to live in “questionable” housing programs, Steve Gordon, the founder of the Strategic Reentry Group, (SRG) and members of a local reentry coalition in Fort Worth, Texas set out to put together a useful inventory of available housing in their area that can be replicated elsewhere.   View Link

Jail Inmates at Midyear 2010 – Statistical Tables (NCJ 233431
Bureau of Justice Statistics report on the decrease in jail population in 2010   View Link

Just Facts: As Many Americans Have Criminal Records As College Diplomas
The number of Americans with a criminal history has risen sharply over the past three decades. Today, nearly one-third of the adult working age population has a criminal record. In fact, so many Americans have a criminal record that counting them all is nearly impossible.   View Link

Justice Policy Institute Fact Sheet: Doing the Same Thing and Expecting a Different Result
Fact sheet shows waste of time, effort and money in criminal justice reform efforts   View Link

Justice Reinvestment Initiative State Assessment Report
A report from the Urban Institute reveals how 17 states are expected to save as much as an astounding $4.6 billion through Justice Reinvestment Initiatives.   View Link

Juvenile Justice GPS
Justice GPS (JJGPS - Geography, Policy, Practice & Statistics), is a website that monitors juvenile justice system change by examining state laws and juvenile justice practice, combined with the most relevant state and national statistics.”   View Link

Juveniles: Criminal Career Patterns
“Criminal Career Patterns” discusses the criminal careers of offenders, specifically the links between offending patterns in adolescence and in adulthood; and how studying criminal careers has the potential to provide useful information to practitioners and policymakers.   View Link

Juveniles: Explanations for Offending
"Explanations for Offending” presents an overview of five theoretical perspectives proposed to explain offending patterns over the life course, with attention to the transition from adolescence to adulthood.   View Link

Juveniles: Prediction and Risk/Needs Assessment
”Prediction and Risk/Needs Assessment” examines our ability to predict whether a young adult will commit crimes based on information available from his or her juvenile years and reviews assessment tools used to make these predictions.   View Link

Leave No Veteran Left Behind
The Howard League for Penal Reform, the oldest penal reform charity in Britain, released the initial findings of its cross-national report Leave No Veteran Behind . It examines what Britain's military can learn from the American military's approach to treating veterans after they leave the services   View Link

Life After Prison:Tracking the Experiences of Male Prisoners Returning to Chicago, Cleveland, and Houston
An Urban Institute Justice Policy Center report that studies 652 individuals shortly before their release from prison, and then at two- and seven- months after release to see if their pre-release expectations of finding housing and employment matched the reality of their present situation.   View Link

Life in Limbo: An Examination of Parole Release for Prisoners Serving Life Sentences with the Possibility of Parole in California
Stanford Criminal Justice Center report that looks at the problem of keeping prisoners incarcerated for the reat of their lives.   View Link

Lifetime Lockdown: How Isolation Conditions Impact Prisoner Reentry
The American Friends Service Committee report looks at the effects solitary confinement has on reentrants.   View Link

Locked Out: Improving Educational and Vocational Outcomes for Incarcerated Youth
A first-of-its-kind report released by The Council of State Governments (CSG) Justice Center found that most incarcerated youth do not have access to the same educational services as their peers in the community, and little accountability exists to ensure educational standards are met in lock-up.   View Link

Mapping the Intersections: Criminal Justice Involvement and Food Insecurity in New York City
How does a poor diet relate to reentry? The physical ailments associated with poor nutrition might prevent someone from being hired, or from keeping a job. The report states that poor nutrition contributes to aggression, anxiety and depression, and also decreases one’s productivity. With the other road blocks face, being food insecure can add another barrier to successful reentry.   View Link

Mass Incarceration: The Whole Pie 2015
"This report offers some much needed clarity by piecing together this country’s disparate systems of confinement. The American criminal justice system holds more than 2.3 million people in 1,719 state prisons, 102 federal prisons, 2,259 juvenile correctional facilities, 3,283 local jails, and 79 Indian Country jails as well as in military prisons, immigration detention facilities, civil commitment centers, and prisons in the U.S. territories.And we go deeper to provide further detail on why people in the various systems of confinement are locked up."   View Link

Mature Coping Among Life-Sentenced Inmates: An Exploratory Study of Adjustment Dynamics
The behavior of incarcerated prisoners is likely to be predictive of their behavior on release. Programs targeted at assisting long-term prisoners during incarceration may strengthen public safety.   View Link

Max Out: The Rise in Prison Inmates Released Without Supervision
Pew Charitable Trusts released a new report on June 4, 2014 that reveals that one in five prisoners are released back into the community without supervision. This includes inmates who were held in solitary confinement for a long period of time, and those who have served long sentences.   View Link

Measuring the Effect of Defense Counsel on Homicide Case Outcomes
A new report funded by the National Institute of Justice finds that members of the Defender Association of Philadelphia had an almost 20 percent higher rate of reducing murder convictions than lawyers who were appointed.   View Link

Mending Justice: Sentinel Event Reviews
Mending Justice: Sentinel Event Reviews explores the potential to learn from errors in the criminal justice system by applying a sentinel event review approach. The primary essay — written by James Doyle, a Visiting Fellow with NIJ for two years — discusses how principles used by aviation and medicine to improve outcomes could be adopted in criminal justice. The book includes a message from the Attorney General and 16 commentaries from highly respected representatives of criminal justice researchers, practitioners and other stakeholders.   View Link

Mentoring Ex-Prisoners: A Guide for Prisoner Reentry Programs
A grant from the U.S. Department of Labor was instrumental for the creation of Mentoring Ex-Prisoners: A Guide for Prisoner Reentry Programs, a useful tool for those wishing to use their faith to give faith to others.   View Link

Mentoring Formerly Incarcerated Adults
A Ready4Work study that explores how mentoring in the area of employment aids the formerly incarcerated to reenter successfully.   View Link

Missing Link: Examining Prosecutorial Decision-Making Across Federal District Courts
This report examines federal charging decisions in U.S. District Courts. It addresses the general lack of research on how prosecutorial decisions are made in the federal justice system by assessing the consequences of prosecutorial discretion regarding fairness, equality and consistency in federal charging and punishment decisions.   View Link

Mortality in Local Jails and State Prisons, 2000–2013 - Statistical Tables
Bureau of Justice Statistics Report: Who is Dying in Custody and Why?   View Link

Mortality Rates of Inmates in U.S. Prisons 2000-2009
U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics report on inmate death rates in state and federal prisons. Suicide is the leading cause of inmate deaths.   View Link

Mothers Behind Bars: A State by State Report Card and Analysis
Mothers Behind Bars: A State-by-State Report Card and Analysis of Federal Policies on Confinement for Pregnant and Parenting Women and the Effect on Their Children is a report issued by The Rebecca Project for Human Rights and The National Women's Law Center concerning the abysmal care pregnant inmates receive before, during and after birth.   View Link

Moving Toward a Public Safety Paradigm: A Roundtable Discussion on Victims and Criminal Justice Reform
A Justice Policy Institute report on who is a victim,the history and current status of the victims' movement and issues and services for victims.   View Link

National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL): Federal Indigent Defense 2015: The Independence
In the wake of the severe cuts to the provision of indigent defense services during sequestration in 2013, the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL) created a Federal Indigent Defense Task Force to examine the federal indigent defense system. The mission included an assessment of the level of independence afforded to the Defender Services Office and consideration of whether reforms are necessary to ensure adherence to the ABA’s Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System. After extensive research and more than 130 interviews with key stakeholders, the Task Force identified several significant, persistent deficiencies in the system. This report explores those concerns and offers seven recommendations to assure a robust federal indigent defense system.   View Link

National Justice Atlas of Corrections and Sentencing
An online, interactive, mapping utility that gives policy makers, the media, researchers and the public a neighborhood-level view of where prison inmates and offenders on probation and parole are from and where corrections spending is highest.   View Link

National Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Coalition: Recommendations for Juvenile Justice Reform
A recommendation to the 112th Congress on how to make the juvenile justice system can be reformed and why it needs strong federal leadership.   View Link

National Reentry Resource Center Policy Brief on States that Successfully Reduced Recidivism
Council of State Governments (CSG) Justice Center’s National Reentry Resource Center (NRRC)policy brief showing how Kansas, Michigan, Mississippi, Ohio, Oregon, Texas, and Vermont made “significant reductions in recidivism.”   View Link

No Place for Kids: The Case for Reducing Juvenile Incarceration
A new report from the Annie E. Casey Foundation containing evidence to support the assertion that incarcerating kids simply doesn't work, and that youth prisons not only do not reduce offending but they also frequently expose youth to dangerous and abusive conditions.   View Link

Non-Judicial Drivers into the Juvenile Justice System for Youth of Color
A report funded by California Endowment (CalEndow ) takes a hard look at America’s juvenile justice system, particularly in the way young people of color are criminalized for normal childhood behaviors.   View Link

Offender Reentry: Correctional Statistics, Reintegration into the Community, and Recidivism
Statistics and information on reentry and recidivism, and the types of programs available that support a successful reentry. Updated July 2008   View Link

Old Behind Bars The Aging Prison Population in the United States
Human Rights Watch report on the graying of American prisoners   View Link

On Life Support: Public Health in the Age of Mass Incarceration
A new report from the Vera Institute of Justice, "On Life Support: Public Health in the Age of Mass Incarceration." reveals the dramatic impact mass incarceration has on public health, including the infant mortality rate in America   View Link

On the Chopping Block: State Prison Closings 2012
A report issued by the Sentencing Project reveals that the move to close prisons to help reduce states’ budgets has paid off.   View Link

Parents Behind Bars: What Happens to Their Children?
Children do not often figure in discussions of incarceration, but new research finds more than five million U.S. children have had at least one parent in prison at one time or another—about three times higher than earlier estimates that included only children with a parent currently incarcerated. This report uses the National Survey of Children’s Health to examine both the prevalence of parental incarceration and child outcomes associated with it.   View Link

Performance Incentive Funding: Aligning Fiscal and Operational Responsibility to Produce More Safety at Less Cost
According to the Vera Institute of Justice, “PIF programs are premised on the idea that if the supervision agency or locality sends fewer low-level offenders to prison—thereby causing the state to incur fewer costs—some portion of the state savings should be shared with the agency or locality. With PIF, agencies or localities receive a financial reward for delivering fewer prison commitments through reduced recidivism and revocations that, in turn, must be reinvested into evidence-based programs in the community.”   View Link

Pew Center Survey to Determine Views on Policy Change Regarding America’s Criminal Justice System
Survey of 1,200 likely voters finds most want reduced terms and alternatives to incarceration.   View Link

Planning and Assessing a Law Enforcement Reentry Strategy
The Council of State Governments Justice Center has put together a toolkit that instructs law enforcement agencies on how to work with community organizations to increase public safety and reduce recidivism. The toolkit has been successfully used in several cities to foster successful reentry.   View Link

Policing and Wrongful Convictions
This paper from the Harvard Executive Session’s New Perspectives in Policing series is a dispassionate, thoughtful examination of the systemic causes of wrongful convictions that offers specific, evidence-based recommendations for reducing their likelihood.   View Link

Post-Release Employment and Recidivism Among Different Types of Offenders With A Different Level of Education: A 5-Year Follow-Up Study in Indiana
The Post-Release Employment and Recidivism Among Different Types of Offenders With A Different Level of Education: A 5-Year Follow-Up Study in Indiana found that participants in the study who achieved a high education level were more likely to find employment and less likely to recidivate.   View Link

Practice Brief: Call-In Preparation and Execution
Created by the Center for Crime Prevention and Control at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, with support from the Office of Community Policing Services (COPS), Practice Brief: Call-In Preparation and Execution is meant to be used by those professionals already involved in a creating a Group Violence Reduction Strategy (GVRS) but have not yet “called in” gang members to outline their violence reduction project.   View Link

Predicting Crime through Incarceration: The Impact of Rates of Prison Cycling on Rates of Crime in Communities
This project estimated the impact of “prison cycling” — the flow of inmates into and out of prison — on crime rates in communities, especially focusing on areas with high prison cycling rates in Boston, MA, and Trenton and Newark, NJ. Scholars have theorized that, given the weakened capacity for informal social control in disadvantaged neighborhoods, high levels of prison cycling are likely to further damage community cohesion, leading to increases in crime rates. Incarceration rates are particularly high for minorities in the most disadvantaged urban neighborhoods, especially black males, and as many as one-fifth of adult men are incarcerated on any given day.   View Link

Predicting Erroneous Convictions: A Social Science Approach to Miscarriages of Justice
A National Institute of Justice study that sheds light on the factors that can lead to a wrongful conviction.   View Link

Pretrial Practice: Building a National Research Agenda for the Front End of the Criminal Justice System (Part 2 of 2)
"From October 26-27, 2015, the John Jay College of Criminal Justice and the Laura and John Arnold Foundation (LJAF), held a Roundtable to Develop a National Pretrial Research Agenda as a follow-up to its earlier Roundtable in March 2015, which focused on pretrial practice and ways of rethinking the front end of the criminal justice system. “The national conversation on criminal justice is open to reform like never before,” President Jeremy Travis of the John Jay College of Criminal Justice stated. “There’s an urgency. It feels like we’re in the process of important policy discovery.”   View Link

Pretrial Practice: Rethinking the Front End of the Criminal Justice System (1 of 2)
From March 18 – 20, 2015, the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, together with the Laura and John Arnold Foundation (LJAF), brought together a distinguished group of scholars and practitioners to generate new ways of thinking about pretrial justice. In the words of John Jay President Jeremy Travis, who chaired the Roundtable, those gathered represented a “national brain trust on the issues of pretrial policy, philosophy, values, and practice.” The Roundtable provided an integrated intellectual framework for considering the criminal pretrial stages and sought to boost momentum for change by expanding the community of academics, practitioners,and the public who are interested and invested in pretrial reform.   View Link

Prevalence of Violent Crime among Households with Children, 1993 - 2010
Bureau of Justice Statistics rport shows that four percent of children in the U.S. lived in a household that experienced a violent crime in 2010.   View Link

Prison Visitation Policies: A Fifty State Survey by Chesa Boudin, Trevor Stutz, and Aaron Littman
"This paper presents a summary of the findings from the first fifty-state survey of prison visitation policies,... (and) explores the contours of how prison administrators exercise their discretion to prescribe when and how prisoners may have contact with friends and family."   View Link

Prisoner Reentry Mediation: Unlocking the Potential of Relationships in Tough Economic Times
A guide to using mediation to help formerly incarcerated persons transition successfully.   View Link

Prisons, Prisoners and HIV/AIDS
AVERT (AVERTing HIV and AIDS) report on HIV/AIDS among prisoners, and on how harm reduction policies can prevent transmission.   View Link

Probation and Parole in the United States
Bureau of Justice Statistics report tracking trends in parole and probation in the U.S.   View Link

Process and Systems Change Evaluation Findings from the Transition from Jail to Community Initiative
Transition from Jail to Community model hailed as promising Reentry Initiative for the nine million inmates who transition back into the community annually   View Link

Prosecution and Racial Justice in New York County
The Vera Institute of Justice, found that race was a significant factor at nearly every stage of criminal prosecutions in Manhattan, from setting bail to negotiating a plea deal to sentencing.   View Link

Prosecution and Racial Justice in New York County – Technical Report
This research project involved a partnership between the Vera Institute of Justice (Vera) andthe New York County District Attorney’s Office (DANY). Vera and DANY conducted a study ofDANY’s current practices, addressing the complex relationship between prosecutorial decision making and racial and ethnic justice.   View Link

Public Housing Transformation and Crime: Making the Case for Responsible Relocation
Urban Institue and Emory University Study Estimates Public Housing Transformation's Effect on Crime in Atlanta and Chicago, Advancing Underatanding of Successes and Challenges   View Link

Pulling Levers, Focused Deterrence Strategies to Prevent Crime
Office of Community-Oriented Policing Services(COPS)report on focused deterrence   View Link

Putting Public Safety First: 13 Strategies for Successful Supervision and Reentry
Issued by the Pew Public Safety Performance Project, this public safety policy brief offers 13 strategies to reduce recidivism,cut substance abuse and unemployment while strengthening family ties, and holding the formerly incarcerated accountable.   View Link

Racial Disparity in the Criminal Justice Process: Prosecutors, Judges and the Effects of United States v. Booker
A new paper,Racial Disparity in the Criminal Justice Process: Prosecutors, Judges and the Effects of United States v. Booker, written by Sonja B. Starr and M. Marit Rehavi for The Sentencing Project, claims that there are two “pervasive flaws” in estimating racial disparities in sentencing.   View Link

Racial Perceptions of Crime and Support for Punitive Policies
In announcing the publication of Race and Punishment: Racial Perceptions of Crime and Support for Punitive Policies, authored by Nazgol Ghandnoosh, Ph.D, The Sentencing Project’s Executive Director Marc Mauer writes that the report “synthesizes two decades of research revealing that white Americans’ strong association of crime with blacks and Latinos is related to their support for punitive policies that disproportionately impact people of color.”   View Link

Racial Reconciliation, Truth-Telling and Policy Legitimacy
Office of Community-Oriented Policing Services(COPS) report contains a summary of 2012 Executive Session of police-chiefs, policy-makers and others in which strategies to resolve issues between people of color and law enforcement agencies were discussed.   View Link

Reaching a Higher Ground: Increasing Employment Opportunities for People with Prior Convictions
A University of California, Berkeley, School of Law report on how to better prepare formerly incarcerated persons for the job market. The Berkely Center for Criminal Justice compiled tips from law enforcement officers, government agencies, educational institutions and unions aimed at giving ex-offenders the job skills they need to succeed.   View Link

Realigning Justice Resources: A Review of Population and Spending Shifts in Prison and Community Corrections
A Vera Institute Center on Sentencing and Corrections and Pew Center on the States’ Public Safety Performance Projects report   View Link

Recidivism and Employment Among Returning Prisoners below
Jeffrey Morenoff and David Harding of the University of Michigan examined the association between neighborhood context and the outcomes related to recidivism and employment among a cohort of prisoners released from Michigan state prisons in 2003.   View Link

Recidivism of Prisoners Released in 30 states in 2005: Patterns from 2005 to 2010
Bureau of Justice Statistics findings of a five year study of recidivism.   View Link

Recidivism Reduction Checklists
The Council of State Governments Justice Center is offering what it describes as a “user friendly” series of checklists “to assess state recidivism reduction policies and strategies.”   View Link

Reducing Racial Disparity in the Criminal Justice System: A Manual for Practitioners and Policymakers
The Sentencing Project manual on how to achieve best practices in reducing racial disparities in the criminal justice system.   View Link

Reevaluating Explanations for Racial Disparities
Crime rates have dropped, and new laws and changes in the social structure of America have taken place, yet jails and prisons are still crammed with people of color in disproportionate numbers. Recently, The Sentencing Project provided a new report that attempts to provide answers on why racial disparity is still so prevalent.   View Link

Religion in Prisons: A 50-State Survey of Prison Chaplains
Pew Center report on chaplains and religion in prisons in all fifty states   View Link

Removing Barriers to Opportunity for Parents with Criminal Records and Their Children
Nearly half of U.S. children have at least one parent with a criminal record. Many of these parents have been convicted of only minor offenses—and many only have arrests that never led to a conviction. But whether or not an individual has been incarcerated, having a criminal record can create obstacles to employment, housing, education and training, public assistance, financial empowerment, and more. Since children's life chances are strongly tied to their circumstances during childhood, these barriers may not only affect family stability and economic security in the short term, but also may damage children's long-term well-being and outcomes.   View Link

Repairing Shattered Lives: Brain Injury and its Implications for Criminal Justice
The report, Repairing Shattered Lives: Brain Injury and its Implications for Criminal Justice, examines the correlation between Traumatic Brain Injury and crime, and reoffending.   View Link

Research Brief: California Youth Crime Plunges to All-Time Low
Research by the California Department of Justice’s Criminal Justice Statistics Center (CJSC) has shown that crimes committed by youth in the state have dropped to an all-time low level. Arrests of young people under the age of 18 have declined by 20 percent from 2010 to 2011. This number is the lowest since records began being collected in 1954, according to CJSC.   View Link

Roadblocks to Reform, Perils for Georgia’s Criminal Justice System
The Law Office of the Southern Center for Human Rights in Atlanta, Georgia has issued a report that is critical of private prison and private probation companies in the state because there is little transparency and the expected results that the companies promoted have not been met. Roadblocks to Reform, Perils for Georgia’s Criminal Justice System provides an overview of the problems, along with recommendations to correct them.   View Link

Rolling Back Prices and Raising Crime Rates? The Walmart Effect on Crime in the United States
Using various data sources and propensity-weighted multilevel modelling, this paper explores the ‘Wal-Mart effect’ on crime.   View Link

Rutgers University Center for Behavioral Health Services and Criminal Justice Research
A series of studies providing in-depth research on specific areas regarding reentry and criminal justice.   View Link

Separation by Bars and Miles: Visitation in State Prisons
Report reveals most people in prison are incarcerated over 100 miles away from home.   View Link

Smart on Crime: Recommendations for the Administration and Congress
Forty criminal justice reform organizations issue a report scrutinizing sixteen key issues that need to be addressed in the criminal justice system, and add recommendations for change.   View Link

Social Networks: Delinquency and Gang Membership
Report Follows the Link between Young Latinos and the Gang Lifestyle   View Link

State Profiles of Health Care Information for the Criminal Justice System
The Legal Action Center created “State Profiles of Health Care Information for the Criminal Justice System,” an interactive map designed for use by criminal justice practitioners to help returning citizens and those on parole or probation access affordable health care easier. By clicking on a state, one can find basic information on the state’s health care system, insurance, including links to free or low-cost health benefits, and also on substance abuse and mental health services.   View Link

State Recidivism Studies
Published in June 2010 by The Sentencing Project, State Recidivism Studies offers a state-by-state database of recidivism rates. Editor's note: Study can be seen clearly by clicking on Zoom button and enlarging to 125%.   View Link

State Reforms Promoting Employment of People with Criminal Records: 2010-2011 Legislative Round-Up
The Sentencing Project, the National Employment Law Network, and the H.I.R.E. Network have collaborated on a report, State Reforms Promoting Employment of People with Criminal Records: 2010-2011 Legislative Round-Up, which offers information on laws that were passed in an effort to help those with criminal histories secure a better chance of finding a job. The report also highlights state trends, and acts as a supportive guide for lawmakers and others seeking to find ways to make the transition from prison to the community more successful.   View Link

State-by-State Analysis of Restoration of Rights and Status Following Arrest or Conviction
These reference materials are intended as a resource for practitioners in all phases of the criminal justice system, for courts, for civil practitioners assisting clients whose court-imposed sentence has exposed them to additional civil penalties, for policymakers and advocates interested in reentry and reintegration of convicted persons, and for the millions of Americans with a criminal record who are seeking to put their past behind them.   View Link

State-Level Estimates of Felon Disenfranchisement in the United States, 2010
Sentencing Project report offering a state-by-state guide that provides the disenfranchisement percentage for each state.   View Link

States of Incarceration: The Global Context
Prison Policy Initiative provides a graphic, that "...charted the comparative incarceration rates of every U.S. state alongside the world’s nations. While there are certainly important differences between how U.S. states handle incarceration, placing each state in a global context reveals that incarceration policy in every region of this country is out of step with the rest of the world."   View Link

States of Women’s Incarceration: The Global Context
New infographic & report: How does women’s incarceration in your state compare to countries across the world?   View Link

Sticker Shock: Calculating the Full Price Tag for Youth incarceration
Justice Policy Institue reports that the hidden costs of incarcerating youth include the cost of recidivism, lost future earnings of confined youth, lost future government tax revenue, additional Medicare and Medicaid spending, and the cost of sexual assault on confined youth. This report provides first-ever estimates of long-term costs of confinement on taxpayers and youth   View Link

Strategies for Engaging Students Involved with the Criminal Justice System
The New York Reentry Education Network (NYREN) toolkit designed to aid service providers to help those with a criminal background to access education.   View Link

Study: Half of black males, 40 percent of white males arrested by age 23
The U.S. Census Bureau reports that African Americans make up 12.6 percent of this country’s population. The NAACP states that African-Americans make up one million of the total 2.3 million people held in American prisons. Now a study released on January 6, 2014 in the journal “Crime & Delinquency” offers further statistics that reflect the racial disparity within the U.S. criminal justice system   View Link

Studying Deterrence Among High-Risk Adolescents
The Pathways to Desistance study followed more than 1,300 serious juvenile offenders for 7 years after their conviction. In this bulletin, the authors present some key findings on the link between perceptions of the threat of sanctions and deterrence from crime among serious adolescent offenders.   View Link

System Overload: The Costs of Under-Resourcing Public Defense
System Overload: The Costs of Under-Resourcing Public Defense looks at the overburdened public defense system, and how dedicated public defenders try to provide the best defense for their clients with little available resources. The report recommends ways put in place "a more fair and effective justice system that guarantees quality representation, curtails wasteful spending practices, and decreases the overuse of incarceration."   View Link

Ten Economic Facts about Crime and Incarceration in the United States
While there is significant focus on America’s incarceration policies, it is important to consider that crime continues to be a concern for policymakers, particularly at the state and local levels. Public spending on fighting crime—including the costs of incarceration, policing, and judicial and legal services—as well as private spending by households and businesses is substantial. There are also tremendous costs to the victims of crime, such as medical costs, lost earnings, and an overall loss in quality of life. Crime also stymies economic growth.   View Link

Ten Truths that Matter when Working with Justice Involved Women
This document reviews ten truths about justice involved women—gleaned from the research over the last few decades that must be recognized if we are to successfully manage this population, achieve greater reductions in recidivism, and improve public safety outcomes.   View Link

The 2% Death Penalty: How a Minority of Counties Produce Most
The Death Penalty Information Center has produced a startling report that reveals a small number of counties in America are responsible for the majority of death cases.   View Link

The Acute Effect of Local Homicides on Children's Cognitive Performance
A study by Patrick Sharkey of NYU details how exposure to violence can have disastrous effects on children.   View Link

The Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACES) Survey Toolkit for Providers
A new toolkit that aims to help services providers give a survey about traumatic childhood experiences that are linked to negative effects on health and well-being   View Link

The Answer is No: Too Little Compassionate Release in U.S. Federal Prisons
Families Against Mandatory Minimums (FAMM) and Human Rights Watch (HRW) have released a new report, The Answer is No: Too Little Compassionate Release in U.S. Federal Prisons, which provides information on the BOP’s policy in dealing with dying inmates, and others who petition the agency for an early release. Beside the humane reason for releasing a sick or dying prisoner, financial considerations are also addressed in the report.   View Link

The Best Reporting on PTSD in Children Exposed to Violence
Pro Publica has compiled a list of the best reporting on children who suffer from PTSD after being exposed to violence. This is a must-read for anyone working with juveniles, or trying to help adults rebuild their lives.   View Link

The Causes and Effects of Get Tough: A Look at How Tough-on-Crime Policies Rose
"The paper analyzes the rise of get-tough crime legislation to the American public policy agenda and examines the effects of these policies on crime and inmate populations."   View Link

The Changing Racial Dynamics of Women’s Incarceration
A new Sentencing Project report shows that the incarceration rate of black women has dropped over the period of 2000 -2009.   View Link

The Cost of Private Prisons
Research and the recent experiences of states show that the promised cost savings often fail to materialize for government agencies that contract with for-profit prison companies.   View Link

The Effect of Incarceration on the Epidemiology of Heart Disease
Dr Erica Wang writes of the report,"The United States incarcerates more people than any nation in the world, with currently 2.2 million individuals behind bars. Rates are the highest among African-American men, who have a one-in-three lifetime chance of being incarcerated. What does this have to do with cardiology? It turns out — more than you might think."   View Link

The Elected Official's Reentry Toolkit for Jail Reentry
A report on how elected officials can mobilize diverse organizations and agencies to create a reentry initiative in their community, or better an existing one.   View Link

The Essence of Innocence: Consequences of Dehumanizing Black Children
Phillip A. Goff and colleagues explicate why black youth are not afforded the same perception of innocence that is reserved for white youth.   View Link

The Fiscal Crisis in Corrections
This study examines the actions taken by several states to alleviate the fiscal crisis in corrections and examines possible alternatives to incarceration and their impact on budget reductions.   View Link

The Graying of Our Incarceration Nation
The Bureau of Justice Statistics estimates that between 12.3 million and 13.9 million Americans - overwhelmingly male, disproportionately people of color - have been convicted of a felony and between 5.4 million and 6.1 million served prison time. Many young men imprisoned during the early years of the prison boom in the mid-1980s are now well into middle age. More than one-third of all Americans who have spent time in prison are older than 50, and nearly 9 percent are older than 60.   View Link

The Impact of Family Visitation on Incarcerated Youth’s Behavior and School Performance
Vera Institute researchers found that family visitation of incarcerated youth was associated with improved behavior and school performance. These findings highlight the importance of visitation and suggest that juvenile correctional facilities should try to change their visitation policies and related practices to promote more frequent visitation with families.   View Link

The Impact of Probation and Parole Populations on Arrests in Four California Cities
Council of State Governments (CSG) “unprecedented study of four California districts” which recommends that law enforcement and corrections work together to lessen crimes committed by people under supervision.   View Link

The Influence of a Defendant’s Body Weight on Perceptions of Guilt
Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at Yale University study found that female defendants who were overweight were more likely to be convicted by male jurors than thinner female defendants.   View Link

The Intersectionality of Race, Gender, and Reentry: Challenges for African-American Women
Law Professor Geneva Brown has written a brief describing the unique problems African-American women face when they reenter their communities.   View Link

The Missing Organizational Dimension of Prisoner Reentry: An Ethnography of the Road to Reentry at a Nonprofit Service Provider
Prisoner reentry has received great interest in political sociology, criminology, and beyond. Research documents the struggles of individuals trying to find their way back into society. Less attention has been given to the organizational aspects of reentry. This is unfortunate given the rapid growth of nonprofit reentry organizations in the U.S., which introduces a new set of questions about the context and challenges to prisoner reentry.   View Link

The Multi-Site Adult Drug Court Evaluation: Executive Summary
An Urban Institute report on the correlation between Drug Courts, supportive judges, and the reduction of drug abuse and criminal behavior.   View Link

The Price of Jails: Measuring the Taxpayer Cost of Local Incarceration
This report is "a tool to help cities and counties identify the full scope of potential savings as they reshape their systems to better meet their justice and safety goals."   View Link

The Price of Prisons: What Incarceration Costs Taxpayers
In its report, The Price of Prisons: What Incarceration Costs Taxpayers, the Vera Institute provides startling information about the billions of extra dollars Americans are paying outside of their states’ corrections budget to keep prisoners locked up. The information in the report was obtained from a 2010 survey in which 40 states participated.   View Link

The Sentencing Project’s “Annual Report 2013”
The Sentencing Project’s newly released “Annual Report 2013” contains reports within the report. Links to papers that The Sentencing Project published last year provide an abundance of information on topics such as women in the criminal justice system, racial disparity, life sentences, felony disenfranchisement, private prisons, mass incarceration and criminal justice policies.   View Link

The Sexual Abuse to Prison Pipeline: The Girls’ Story
The report, The Sexual Abuse to Prison Pipeline: The Girls’ Story, offers policy recommendations for dismantling the abuse to prison pipeline   View Link

The Social Reintegration of Ex-Prisoners in Council of European Member States
A report by the Religious Society of Friends that details the problems facing formerly incarcerated persons in many European nations. The report offers suggestions on ways to make reentry more successful.   View Link

The State of Sentencing 2010: Development in Policy and Practice
A Sentencing Project report that highlights reforms in 23 states and documents a growing trend to reexamine sentencing policies and scale back the use of imprisonment in order to control spending.   View Link

The State of Sentencing 2012: Developments in Policy and Practice
A Sentencing Project report which shows what 24 states have done to help reduce incarceration, while keeping public safety at the forefront of sentencing reform.   View Link

The State of Sentencing 2013
The State of Sentencing 2013 provides detailsof the reforms 31 states made in their adult and juvenile justice systems.   View Link

The Trustworthiness of an Inmate’s Face May Seal His Fate
“The American justice system is built on the idea that it is blind to all but the objective facts, as exemplified by the great lengths we go to make sure that jurors enter the courts unbiased and are protected from outside influences during their service. Of course, this ideal does not always match reality,” say psychological scientists John Paul Wilson and Nicholas Rule of the University of Toronto, co-authors on the study. “Here, we’ve shown that facial biases unfortunately leak into what should be the most reflective and careful decision that juries and judges can make — whether to execute someone.”   View Link

The Use of Criminal History Records in College Admissions Reconsidered
The Center for Community Alternative's report on how those with a criminal record are often denied admission to colleges, despite the fact that formerly incarcerated persons who obtain higher education are shown to have a lower recidivism rate. The report suggests that colleges with a policy that deny ex offenders admission should reconsider and details why.   View Link

Thinking Outside the Cell: Concrete Suggestions for Positive Change
Susan Sered’s well thought out models for implementing effective changes in policies regarding issues that are plaguing society.   View Link

Through the Diamond Threshold: Promoting Cultural Competency in Understanding American Indian Substance Abuse
The Mid-America Addiction Technology Transfer Center Network (ATTC) and the Oklahoma City Area Inter-Tribal Health Board has developed an American Indian cultural awareness training curriculum with the aim of treating American Indian substance abusers.   View Link

Time Served: The High Cost, Low Return of Longer Prison Terms
Pew Report shows that the time a person served in prison rose significantly over the last two decades and that the extra time served cost states over $10 billion dollars. The study shows that over 50 percent of those who were locked up did not commit a violent crime. Florida was at the top of the list for prison time served in 2009 with a 136 percent increase.   View Link

To Build a Better Justice System (Envisioning Criminal Justice Reform Twenty-Five Years from Now)
To celebrate their 25th anniversary, the Sentencing Project asked some of the greatest minds in the criminal justice reform field to share their visions of the future.   View Link

Toolkit: Trauma Informed Care: Perspectives and Resources
JBS International, Inc. and Georgetown University National Technical Assistance Center for Children’s Mental Health produced “Trauma Informed Care: Perspectives and Resources,” a toolkit that provides valuable information to better understand the impact that adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have on juveniles, sometimes leading young people to become involved in the juvenile system.   View Link

Tracking Costs and Savings Through Justice Reinvestment
Urban Institute Policy Brief   View Link

Tracking Juvenile Justice System Reform
How are juveniles defended? Explore differences in state policy on a range of juvenile defense topics and juvenile defense data.   View Link

Trauma and Resilience: A New Look at Legal Advocacy for Youth in the Juvenile Justice System
Trauma and Resilience details how “systems and services’ can play an important role in helping children and families surmount trauma, thereby providing an effective way to reduce the violence which has permeated our culture.   View Link

Treatment and Reentry Practices for Sex Offenders, An Overview of States
A comprehensive report on prison-based treatment, community-based reentry and treatment, and community supervision for convicted sex offenders. The report offers a state-by-state guide of available services in prison, and in the community.   View Link

Tribal Youth in the Federal System
A study by The Urban Institute looks at Native American youth in the federal justice system. The report, which was conducted in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Justice, sought to explore this small and largely overlooked population and the way in which these youth are handled between tribal, state, and federal justice systems.   View Link

U.S. Justice Report on Contacts with the Police and the Public, 2008
Report on who was stopped by the police, and for what reason.   View Link

U.S. Sentencing Commission report on the impact of mandatory minimums
A new 645-page report by the United States Sentencing Commission examines the impact of mandatory minimum penalties on federal sentencing, the first such assessment since the Commission’s examination of this issue in 1991. The Commission concludes that “certain mandatory minimums apply too broadly, are excessively severe, and are applied inconsistently.”   View Link

Unbalanced Juvenile Justice (Map)
In an effort to expose the widespread practice of racial disparity among incarcerated juveniles in America, the Burns Institute created an interactive map that allows one to view the detention rate of youths of color from 1997 – 2011 and allows comparison between each state.   View Link

Using Administrative Data to Prioritize Jail Reentry Services
A Vera Institute of Justice Substance Use and Mental Health and New York City Department of Corrections brief.   View Link

Using Evidence for Public Health Decision Making: Violence Prevention Focused on Children and Youth
The guide discusses evidence-based interventions that have proven to be successful   View Link

Venturing Beyond the Gates
Venturing Beyond the gates is one of the seminal studies on entrepreneurship as a vehicle for facilitating reentry for certain offenders.   View Link

Veterans Treatment Courts
The National Association of Drug Court Professionals offers a brief on Veterans Treatment Courts   View Link

Violent Youth Crime Plummets to a 30-year Low
A John Jay College of Justice Research and Evaluation Center report showing a reduction in youth crime over a 30-year period.   View Link

What Happens When An Entire City Becomes A Drug-Free School Zone
A look at the collateral consequences of drug-free school zone policies   View Link

Women Engaged in the Criminal Justice System
Transcript of the Webinar sponsored by The National Resource Center on Justice-Involved Women (NRCJIW), the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the National Institute of Corrections which focused on best practices when working with, and treating, female prisoners.   View Link

Women in Prison: The Cycle of Violence
Most women in prison in Britain have experienced sexual or domestic violence, yet the system fails to address their needs and further victimises them.   View Link

Women’s Pathways to Jail: The Roles and Intersections of Serious Mental Illness and Trauma
Women’s Pathways to Jail: The Roles and Intersections of Serious Mental Illness and Trauma, exposes the role mental health issues and serious mental disorders play in behaviors that lead to the arrest and conviction of an increasing number of incarcerated females.   View Link

Facts on Prisoners and Incarceration

   

Following is a selection of facts related to prisoners and incarceration listed by Category. Click on the category and the facts for each category will be displayed.

 

  • Children and
    Families
  • Incarceration
  • Reentry
     
  • Reentry and
    Recidivism
  • Reentry Employment
    and Entrepreneurship
  • Women in Prison
     
     
2,250,000 children are estimated to have at least one parent who is incarcerated on any day in America.

Over 5 million children have had parents who were incarcerated at least once. That is 6% of all American children.

Over 55,000 American children end up in foster care when their parents are incarcerated. Most of these children were in the foster care system at least twice during their parents’ incarceration.

Over 50% of current prisoners come from single parent families, or were raised by other family members, or in foster homes.

78% of women entering prison are mothers, and 64% are fathers. Additionally, 6% of women are pregnant when they enter prison. Most of these women will be separated from their babies shortly after giving birth.

50% of incarcerated parents are never visited by their children.

85% of prisoners earn less than $25,000 a year before their incarceration, and three out of ten earn less than $10,000 a year.

In an effort to stay connected to an incarcerated family member, a family may spend almost $250 per month on telephone calls due to the high cost of mandated collect phone calls imposed by private phone companies contracted by the prison system.

In the fiscal year 1997-1998 New York State made a profit of $21 million dollars on prison-based collect call commissions. Other states such as California, Ohio, and Florida made from $10 million to $15 million.
Source: A Sentence of Their Own - A film by Edgar A. Barens www.asentenceoftheirown.com - 2010 

     
In California in 1969 the cost of incarceration per inmate was under $1,000. In 2010 the cost is over $52,000.
Source: Parade Magazine, May 30 - 2010 

In 2008 one in 48 of every working-age male was incarcerated in prison or jail in the U.S.

In 2008 there were 2.3 million Americans incarcerated, two-thirds in prisons and one-third in jails.

60% of all prisoners in the U.S. are convicted of a non-violent crime.

Non-violent drug offenders make up 25% of those incarcerated. Violent crime rose only 3% from 1980 to 2008, and property crime was lowered by 20% during the same time period. From 1980 until 2008 the U.S. population increased by 33%, while the U.S. prison and jail population increased by 350%.

In 2008, federal, state, and local governments spent approximately $75 billion on corrections; most of that amount was used for incarceration.
Source: Center for Economic and Policy Research June - 2010 

A recent study predicts that the state and federal prison population will increase by 200,000 in the next five years.
Source: JFA Institute - 2007 

In 2005 the incarceration rate for whites was 418 per 100,000, as compared to 2,290 for blacks, and 742 for Hispanics.
Source: Maurer and King - 2007 

The incarceration rate in America now exceeds 735 per 100,000 people.
Source: Harrison and Beck - 2006 

There are more than 2.3 million people incarcerated in state and federal prisons and local jails.
Source: Harrison and Beck - 2006 

Among state prisoners, 73 percent of women and 55 percent of males reported having a mental health problem
Source: James and Glaze - 2006 

     
91% of prisoners who are released are male. 55% of them are white, 44% are black, and 17% are Hispanic.

The average age of released prisoners is 33 years old.

The average education level of released prisoners is the 11th grade.

Among those released, there is a high incidence of substance abuse, and mental, or physical, health problems.

Stable housing is a problem for many prisoners after release.

Below average levels of education, work experience, or skills makes finding steady employment challenging for ex offenders. Many employers will not hire ex offenders.

Former prisoners are more likely to have significant mental disorders, chronic and infectious diseases, and to return to communities with inadequate health care.

Although the majority of prisoners have had a broad history of substance abuse, less than 33% receive treatment upon release.


Source: The Urban Institute, June - 2010 

     
95% of state prisoners will be released back into their communities.

In 20008, 735,000 persons were released from state and federal prisons, a 20% increase from 20000.

Approximately nine million people are released from jails each year in the U.S.

In 2008, parole violations accounted for 34.2 % of all prison admissions, 36.2 % of all state prison admissions, and 8.2 % of all federal prison admissions.

25% of all adults who exited parole in 2008 (133,947 people) went back to prison for violating terms of their supervision, and 9 percent of adults were sent back for committing a new crime.

Two out of five prison and jail inmates lack a high school diploma, or a GED.

Employment rates and earnings of incarcerated people are often low before their incarceration due to limited education, low skill levels, physical and mental health problems, and other factors. Incarceration exacerbates these employment challenges.

A large three-state recidivism study found that less than half of those released from prison had a secure job waiting for them when they returned home.
Source: Department of Justice Statistics - 2010 

     
If between one and seven percent of people leaving prison became self-employed, 6,500 to 45,000 new jobs would be created.
Source: Prison Reentry Institute at John Jay College of Criminal Justice - 2007 

Studies in Milwaukee, WI and New York, NY found that a criminal record reduces employment opportunities by 50 percent for whites and 64 percent for blacks.
Source: Pager - 2003 

60 percent of establishments surveyed in four major cities reported that they would “probably not” or “definitely not” hire a formerly incarcerated person.
Source: Holzer, Raphael and Stoll - 2002 

A study that examined the relationship between drug dealing as a youth and legitimate self-employment later in life found drug dealing had a large, positive, and statistically significant effect on the future probability of self-employment., and that those who sold drugs when young were 11 to 21 percent more likely to become self-employed in their later years than those who weren’t drug dealers.
Source: Fairlie - 2002 

Research by business professor Matthew Sonfield showed that those who are incarcerated have similar or higher entrepreneurial aptitude than various other types of entrepreneurs.
Source: Sonfield, Lussier and Barbato - 2001 

     
The number of women in prison has increased to more than double the rate of men. A great number of women in prison or jail have a history of sexual abuse, a high rate of HIV, and have substance abuse issues.
Source: Sentencing Project www.sentencingproject.org - 2010 

There were approximately 207,000 women in prison or jail in 2008, an increase of about 33% since 2000.
Source: National Public Radio, Tell Me More program June 23 - 2009 

The incarceration rates for mothers in the U.S. started skyrocketing in the 1980’s, when crack cocaine usage started reaching epidemic proportions, and tough mandatory minimum laws were implemented. The number of incarcerated mothers jumped 131% from 1991 to 2007, while the number of incarcerated fathers increased by 77% .
Source: CNN.com May 7 - 2009 

Women comprise seven percent of the state prison population, but are the fastest growing portion of the incarceration population
Source: Harrison and Black - 2006 

Between 1977 and 2001 there was a 512 per cent increase in the number of females sentenced. There were 85,031 women sentenced in 2001, compared to 12,279 in 1977. The increase is attributed to the mandatory minimum laws. Most women were sentenced for nonviolent, drug related crimes
Source: North County (CA) Times December 26 - 2006 

In 1980 the U.S. imprisoned 12,331 women in state correctional facilities. That number jumped to 98,602 by 2005, an increase of nearly 700 percent.
Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics - 2005 


Job Opportunities

 

EMPLOYERS can receive a
$2,400 tax credit for hiring ex-offenders
Click on each job for more information. You may submit your resume to the email address listed on the job description. If you are an employer and have a job you would like listed on our Reentry Central Jobs board, please email us with your job posting and we will gladly add it.
jobs@reentrycentral.net
 
 



Federal Bonding Program

In 1966, the U.S. Department of Labor established the Federal Bonding Program which covers ex-offenders for up to the first six months of their employment at no cost to their employer or the job applicant. In order to find our more about this program, vist the directory of Federal Bonding Contacts for your state.


Work Opportunity Tax Credit

The Work Opportunity Tax Credit (WOTC) is a Federal tax credit incentive that the Congress provides to private-sector businesses for hiring individuals from twelve target groups who have consistently faced significant barriers to employment. The main objective of this program is to enable the targeted employees to gradually move from economic dependency into self-sufficiency as they earn a steady income and become contributing taxpayers, while the participating employers are compensated by being able to reduce their federal income tax liability. WOTC joins other workforce programs that help incentivize workplace diversity and facilitate access to good jobs for American workers. - United States Department of Labor

Qualifications

Any individual who:
1. Has been convicted of a felony under any statute of the United States or any state.
2. Has a hire date which is not more than one year after the last date on which the individual was
convicted or was released from prison.

Employee Form - IRS Form 8850

Employer Form - WOTC Employment and Training Administration Form 9061

Employer's Tax Return Form - To be filed with Employer's Tax Return - IRS Form 5884

 

Links

Resources for Ex-Offenders
Following is a selection of links to important resources and organizations in the field of ex-offender reentry and related criminal justice areas.
     
A Just Cause
A Just Cause is a volunteer organization that was established in 2005 by a group of concerned citizens who were witness to a federal criminal case that was grossly over-criminalized. After seeing how a case can be misconstrued as criminal, and peoples' lives turned upside down, A Just Cause was formed to fight abuse and misuse of power within the justice system. After launching AJC, it became apparent that over-criminalization is a growing trend. AJC is made up of regular citizens, professionals, attorneys, and those who have been wrongfully convicted who want to bring attention to the problem and help facilitate change.  View Link


Action Committee for Women in Prison
The Action Committee for Women in Prison supports the humane and compassionate treatment of incarcerated women, while also working and sharing information with other organizations that seek reform in the criminal justice system, particularly as it pertains to women. ACWIP also helps secure the release of individual women who pose no threat to society. ACWIP educates the public on various criminal justice topics, and advocates for rehabilitation and restorative justice over punishment.  View Link


Aleph Institute
The Spark of Light program is the only national program that serves Jewish people incarcerated in the United States to ensure that they stay connected to their families, communities and Jewish heritage. Spark of Light social programs and services provide for the religious, rehabilitation and humanitarian needs of individuals and their families from the moment of arrest, during the pre-sentencing stage and trial, and throughout their imprisonment. Spark of Light helps inmates amend their wrongs, seek forgiveness and have the best possible opportunity to return to society as purposeful, responsible people.  View Link


American Probation and Parole Association
The American Probation and Parole Association is an international group made up of those involved in probation, parole and community-based corrections, for both adults and juveniles.  View Link


Artistic Talents, Inc,
Artistic Talents Inc. (ATI) is a community Non-for-Profit 501 (c) (3) Organization dedicated in Transforming Young Lives Through The Arts. We offer a comprehensive list of counseling and support servcies aimed at healing youth and giving them skills to get ahead.  View Link


Books Not Bars
Books Not Bars is a California campaign to close California's youth prisons and offer viable alternatives, such as regional rehabilitation centers and community-based programs.  View Link


Brennan Center for Justice
The Brennan Center for Justice Program at NYU School of Law seeks reform in the justice system, as well ways to reduce the gap in justice, so that all are afforded the right to competent legal representation.  View Link


Bureau of Justice Statistics
The Bureau of Justice Statistics collects, analyzes,publishes, and disseminates information on crime, criminal offenders, crime victims, and offers information on all levels of the justice system.  View Link


CAN-DO
Clemency for All Non-violent Drug Offenders (CAN-DO) advocates for clemency for federal prisoners who were wrongly or unjustly convicted on drug charges. Many of the prisoners that CAN-DO is attempting to aid are mothers convicted on conspiracy charges.  View Link


Center for Community Alternatives
The Center for Community Alternatives describes itself as a leader in community based alternatives to incarceration. Its mission is the promotion of reintegrative justice and the reduction in relying on incarceration. CCA achieves its mission through its services, advocating, and developing public policy that pursues human and civil rights.  View Link


Center for Public Integrity
The Center for Public Integrity produces original investigative journalism concerning important public issues, and makes institutional power more transparent and accountable.  View Link


City Bar Justice Center
The City Bar Justice Center increases access to justice by leveraging the resources of the New York City legal community. Drawing upon our relationship with the New York City Bar, the Justice Center provides legal assistance to those in need; mobilizes lawyers, law firms, corporate legal departments, and other legal institutions to provide pro bono legal services; educates the public on legal issues; fosters strategic relationships; and impacts public policy.  View Link


Connecticut Appleseed
Connecticut Appleseed is a statewide, non-partisan 501(c)3 organization whose mission is to develop solutions for the causes, rather than the symptoms, of our state’s social problems. We help to make systemic changes in the delivery of services to enhance social and economic justice in our state by mobilizing the skills and resources of pro bono lawyers and other professionals. Our projects focus on improving access to education, healthcare and financial services for the state’s disadvantaged and underrepresented citizens.  View Link


Corrections.One.com
Excellent resource sharing site for correctional officers.  View Link


Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency (CSOSA) of Washington, D.C.
An excellent source of radio and television shows produced by CSOSA that are centered on criminal justice issues. The site also contains blogs.  View Link


Criminal Justice Legal Foundation
Criminal Justice Legal Foundation is a non-profit organization that dedicates itself to restoring the balance between the rights of crime victims and the criminally accused.  View Link


Cure National
Citizens United for Rehabilitation of Errants (CURE) started out as a grass root organization that went national in 1985. CURE believes that not everyone should be in prison, and that those who absolutely must should be given the needed resources to turn their lives around.  View Link


Dannon Project
The Dannon Project was founded by Jeh Jeh Pruitt and his wife, Kerri Pruitt, in 1999. The organization was named after Dannon Pruitt, Jeh Jeh's youngest brother, who was killed by a person that had been recently released from prison on a non-violent offense. Kerri believed that if this young man had a strong support system after his release that he would probably have made better choices about how he used his time maybe preventing Dannon's death. The Dannon Project obtained non-profit status in October 2003. It was established to help persons in transition, especially those with addictions on the road to recovery, unemployed, underemployed, at-risk youth and adults, both male and female and specifically non violent offenders reentering society.  View Link


Delancey Street Foundation
Founded in 1971, the Delancey Street Foundation aids the homeless, substance abusers, and the formerly incarcerated through housing, employment and programming.  View Link


Ex-Offender Nation
Ex-Offender Nation is committed to bring to light the problem of overprosecution, oversentencing, overincarceration, and overcriminalization. We are a membership organization of people alarmed by the criminal justice system. Ex-Offender Nation is a movement to stop the "arrest of America."  View Link


Fair Shake Reentry Resource Center
Fair Shake has developed and assembled references for all stakeholders. The Resource Directory is primarily focused on reintegration and support for former felons, but also contains valuable information for family members, correctional officers, employers, property managers, and community members to learn about and assist in their transition.  View Link


Families Against Mandatory Minimums
FAMM advocates for fair sentencing laws, state and federal sentencing reform, and gives a voice to inmates and their families who were adversely affected by the mandatory minimum laws. FAMM also hosts SentenceSpeak, a blog that is a forum for educating the general public about sentencing injustices.  View Link


Family and Corrections Network
FCN is a national resource center on children and families of the incarcerated.  View Link


Federal Cure
Federal Cure advocates for federal inmates by addressing issues concerning fair sentencing, promoting alternatives to incarceration, supporting productive reentry programs, and is a driving force for reintroducing programs that offer rehabilitation in prisons.  View Link


Fortune Society
The Fortune Society believes that those who are, or were, incarcerated can be productive members of society. Fortune Society supports successful reentry of ex offenders, and alternatives to incarceration, thereby strengthening communities.  View Link


Global Youth Justice
Global Youth Justice proactively champions volunteer-driven strategies which alleviate some of the world's most pressing, complex, and costly social problems. We strive to improve the quality of life for humans through reducing high crime and historic-high incarceration rates of both youth and adults locally and globally. We initially achieve this through favorable outcomes that result from advancing the global expansion of quality local youth justice and juvenile justice voluntary diversion programs often called youth court, teen court, peer court, student court and youth peer panel. Volunteer youth serve as youth justice representatives in local juvenile justice systems on real crimes, offenses, and violations involving their peers. A record 1,264 plus communities around the globe now operate one of these adult and youth volunteer-driven approaches to reduce the incidence and prevent the escalation of of juvenile, and eventually - adult crime rates.  View Link


Harlem Community & Academic Partnership (HCAP)
The Harlem Community & Academic Partnership (HCAP) is a diverse partnership of community residents, community-based organizations and service providers, academia, and public health institutions. HCAP is committed to identifying social determinants of health and implementing community-based interventions to improve the health and well-being of Harlem residents using a community-based participatory research approach. One of HCAP’s subcommittees is Policy Work Group (PWG), which examines policy barriers to successful community reintegration of formerly incarcerated individuals.  View Link


Jail Exchange
The most comprehensive website featuring information on all the jails and prisons in America, and even in other parts of the world. Jail Exchange also features blogs by people in prison, and those who have been released. It is a helpful website for families of incarcerated persons who need help navigating the criminal justice system.  View Link


Jericho Reentry Program
Jericho is a workforce development program that assists previously incarcerated men who have recently been released reestablish themselves in their communities.  View Link


Just Detention International
Just Detention International is concerned about the safety and well-being of all detainees, including those held in adult prisons and jails, juvenile facilities, immigration detention centers, and police lock-ups, whether run by government agencies or by private corporations on behalf of the government. JDI has three core goals for its work: to ensure government accountability for prisoner rape; to transform ill-informed public attitudes about sexual violence in detention; and to promote access to resources for those who have survived this form of abuse.  View Link


Justice Policy Institute
The Justice Policy Institute seeks ways to reduce incarceration and promotes social policies that are both effective and just.  View Link


LA Myers Consulting - Federal Prison Consultant
LA Myers is a Federal Prison coach and consultant for women facing incarceration.  View Link


Life Skills Education
Life Skills Education offers a new Series for Defendant/Offender Reentry Programs.  View Link


Maine Prisoner Advocacy Coalition
The Maine Prisoner Advocacy Coalition (M-PAC) is comprised of Maine prisoners, their friends and families, victims of crime, and others committed to ethical, positive, and humane changes in Maine's prison system.  View Link


National H.I.R.E. Network (Helping Individuals with criminal records Re-enter through Employment)
Established by the Legal Action Center, the National Helping Individuals with criminal records Re-enter through Employment Network is both a national clearinghouse for information and an advocate for policy change. The goal of the National H.I.R.E. Network is to increase the number and quality of job opportunities available to people with criminal records by changing public policies, employment practices and public opinion. The National H.I.R.E. Network also provides training and technical assistance to agencies working to improve the employment prospects for people with criminal records.  View Link


National Reentry Resource Center
The Resource Center, established by the Second Chance Act, provides assistance to the prisoner reentry field. We provide education, training, and technical assistance to states, tribes, territories, local governments, service providers, nonprofit organizations, and corrections agencies working on prisoner reentry.  View Link


National Resource Center for Justice-Involved Women
A resource for professionals, policymakers, and practitioners who work with adult women involved in the criminal justice system.  View Link


No New Prisons.org
Ordinary citizens can actively oppose prison construction or prison expansion where they live.  View Link


Office of Justice Programs (Reentry)
Provides resources and funding to develop, implement, enhance, and evaluate reentry strategies to ensure the safety of communities and reduction of serious, violent crime.  View Link


Open Society Institute
The Open Society's Justice Initiative supports worldwide justice reform. OSI seeks ways to implement alternatives to pre-trial detention, provide more access to quality legal representation, and to bring together those working toward justice reform.  View Link


Our Place
Our Place, DC (Our Place) is a unique non-profit organization in the District of Columbia (DC) dedicated to providing gender-specific direct services and advocacy to help formerly and currently incarcerated women come back home from prison. We operate with a mission to support women who are or have been in the criminal justice system by providing the resources they need to maintain connections with the community, resettle after incarceration, and reconcile with their families. Our Place helps women remain drug and alcohol free, obtain decent housing and jobs, gain access to education, secure resources for their children, and maintain physical and emotional health with a goal of helping women succeed in the community rather than engage in behaviors that result in re-arrest.  View Link


Prison Buddhist Correspondence Course
The Buddhist Association of the United States,, at Chuang Yen Monastery offers a free, comprehensive course on Buddhism to prisoners. The course includes free books and materials.  View Link


Prison Fellowship
Prison Fellowship Ministries is part of a larger cause—a bigger movement—to bring hope, healing and transformation to prisoners. Even more, the movement extends hope to their families, their little children and the communities which receive them back.  View Link


Prison Legal News
Prison Legal News (PLN), a project of the non-profit Human Rights Defense Center, is a 64-page monthly magazine that reports on criminal justice issues and prison and jail-related civil litigation, with an emphasis on prisoners' rights. PLN has published continuously since 1990 and covers a wide range of topics that include prison labor, rape and sexual abuse, misconduct by prison and jail staff, prisoners' constitutional rights, racial and socioeconomic disparities in our criminal justice system, medical and mental health care for prisoners, disenfranchisement, rehabilitation and recidivism, prison privatization, prison and jail phone rates, women prisoners, the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA), prison censorship, the death penalty, HIV and hep C, solitary confinment and control units, and much more. In 2013, PLN received the First Amendment Award from the Society of Professional Journalists.  View Link


Prisoner Reentry Institute at John Jay College
The Prisoner Reentry Institute at John Jay College of Criminal Justice states that its mission spurs innovation and improves practice in the field of reentry through the advancement of knowledge; the translation of research into effective policy; the deliverance of service; and the encouragement of effective partnerships between criminal justice and non-criminal justice disciplines.  View Link


Reaching Out to Jewish Prisoners
Reaching Out helps Jewish prisoners cope with the fears and anxieties prior to going to jail and the obstacles and hurdles while in prison. Prison can be a terrible experience. Being Jewish and in prison can be even harder.  View Link


Reentry Policy Council
The Reentry Policy Council (RPC) was established in 2001 to assist state government officials grappling with the increasing number of people leaving prisons and jails to return to the communities they left behind.  View Link


ReentryNet/NY
ReentryNet/NY is a web-based resource site on reentry from incarceration, for defenders,civil legal services, social services, and policy reform advocates. Developed by The Bronx Defenders and Pro Bono Net, the information on this site is geared toward those in New York, but many materials can be used by those outside of that area.  View Link


Rehab 4 Addiction UK
Rehab 4 Addiction is a free helpline and information service for people suffering from addiction and mental health issues. Email: info@rehab4addiction.co.uk Website manager: Oliver Clark  View Link


RELEASE: News related to Connecticut's formerly incarcerated citizens and the organizations that serve them.
RELEASE is a publication devoted to collecting stories about citizens with criminal histories and the organizations that serve them. Produced by the Institute for Municipal and Regional Policy (IMRP) and created by students from Central Connecticut State University, the newsletter provides profiles, general features, interviews, videos, informative graphs and more. Our goal: to empower ex-offenders and to educate the larger Connecticut community on what it can do to stem recidivism. Release covers employment, housing, education, children of incarcerated parents and other subject areas that relate to building a productive life with a criminal history.  View Link


Safe Streets Arts Foundation
The Safe Streets Arts Foundation uses the arts to allow all segments of the criminal justice community to communicate with each other and with the public. We are especially committed to helping the 2 ½ million men and women in prison, 95% of whom will someday return to society as our neighbors. They receive our support in prison to use the arts to develop their self esteem and a positive attitude vital for successful reentry.  View Link


Safer Foundation
For over thirty years The Safer Foundation has been reducing recidivism by helping the formerly incarcerated find employment, and through their many social service programs.  View Link


Solitary Watch
Solitary Watch is a public website aimed at bringing the widespread use of solitary confinement and other forms of torture in U.S. prisons out of the shadows and into the light of the public square. Solitary Watch’s mission is to provide the public—as well as practicing attorneys, legal scholars, law enforcement and corrections officers, policymakers, educators, advocates, and prisoners—with the first centralized source of background research, unfolding news, and original reporting on solitary confinement in the United States.  View Link


Sponsors, Inc.
Sponsors Mission Statement: To assist men and women from Lane County released from Oregon state correctional facilities and the Lane County Jail in making a successful reentry into our community. Sponsors is nationally recognized as a model utilizing best practices in reentry services.  View Link


The Innocence Project
The Innocence Project is a national litigation and public policy organization dedicated to exonerating wrongfully convicted people through DNA testing and reforming the criminal justice system to prevent future injustice.  View Link


The November Coalition
Working to end drug war injustice, the November Coalition, a non-profit grassroots organization, was founded in 1997. Members educate the public about destructive, unnecessary incarceration due to the U.S. drug war, and advocate for drug war prisoners  View Link


The Sentencing Project
The Sentencing Project is a national organization that works toward a fair and effective criminal justice system, and alternatives to incarceration.  View Link


The Sixth Amendment Center
The Sixth Amendment Center seeks to ensure that no person faces potential time in jail without first having the aid of a lawyer with the time, ability and resources to present an effective defense, as required under the United States Constitution. We do so by measuring public defense systems against established standards of justice. When shortcomings are identified, we help states and counties make their courts fair again in ways that promote public safety and fiscal responsibility.  View Link


The Vera Institute of Justice
The Vera Institute of Justice combines expertise in research, demonstration projects, and technical assistance to help leaders in government and civil society improve the systems people rely on for justice and safety. Vera is an independent, non-partisan, nonprofit center for justice policy and practice.  View Link


Think Outside The Cell Foundation
The Think Outside the Cell Foundation works to end the stigma and to help the incarcerated, the formerly incarcerated and their loved ones through literacy, education, personal development and the removal of societal barriers to the American Dream.  View Link


Thousand Kites
Thousand Kites is a community-based performance, web, video and radio project centered on the United States prison system.  View Link


University Legal Services [ULS]
ULS protects and advances the rights of people with disabilities through a range of interventions including direct advocacy, education, monitoring, policy reform and litigation. The ULS JPAP team represents DC residents with psychiatric disabilities to prevent unnecessary periods of incarceration and reduce barriers to their successful reentry to the community. Our advocacy extends into local and federal correctional facilities,adjudication proceedings and other criminal justice, and mental health systems.  View Link


Urban Institute
The Urban Institute gathers data, conducts research, evaluates programs, offers technical assistance overseas, and educates Americans on social and economical issues.  View Link


Women's Prison Association
Women's Prison Association has programs that help women to find jobs, housing, and medical care, and also helps to reunite them with their families. Via the Institute on Women and Criminal Justice, WPA seeks to advocate for women, and to investigate, through research, ways and programs that will benefit female prisoners and ex offenders.  View Link


 

Grants

 
Following is a selection of available funding. Certain eligibility requirements may apply. If you know of any grants which deserve to be listed in our grant directory, please email us with your suggestion, and we will evaluate it for inclusion.

A subscription to Reentry Central is required to view Grant Details.


grants@reentrycentral.net

 

Contact

 
Reentry Central
Sanford, North Carolina 27330
Phone: 203.415.1725
Email: info@reentrycentral.net


Beatrice Codianni
Executive Director
bcodianni@reentrycentral.net

 

   
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EVENTS

Resources for Ex-Offenders
Following is a list of upcoming events related to the field of ex-offender reentry and related criminal justice topics.

 

 


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