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But They All Come Back: Facing the Challenges of Prisoner Reentry

Jeremy Travis
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TLDR
Travis as mentioned in this paper proposes organizing the criminal justice system around five principles of reentry to encourage change and spur innovation, and argues that the impact of returning prisoners on families and communities has been largely overlooked.
Abstract
As our justice system has embarked upon one of our time's greatest social experiments?responding to crime by expanding prisons?we have forgotten the iron law of imprisonment: they all come back. In 2002, more than 630,000 individuals left federal and state prisons. Thirty years ago, only 150,000 did. In the intense political debate over America's punishment policies, the impact of these returning prisoners on families and communities has been largely overlooked. In But They All Come Back, Jeremy Travis continues his pioneering work on the new realities of punishment in America vis-a-vis public safety, families and children, work, housing, public health, civic identity, and community capacity. Travis proposes organizing the criminal justice system around five principles of reentry to encourage change and spur innovation.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Classifying Prisoner Returns: A Research Note

TL;DR: Scholars often use administrative corrections data to identify the reasons that offenders return to prison, though such data usually obscure more complex processes underlying the cause of a return as mentioned in this paper, and they often use such data to obscure the more complex process underlying the return.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rebranding ex‐convicts

TL;DR: This article developed a theoretical model explaining how the problem of poor labor market outcomes for ex-convicts might be alleviated by an external intervention, and showed that a government or a civic society can design a costly, yet net socially beneficial program through which some exconvicts can credibly convey their good intentions to employers, with fewer electing to return to crime than would otherwise have been the case.