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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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Dissertation

Young adult male ex-offenders’ experiences of the transition from incarceration to the estranged family in a rural community

TL;DR: In this article, a study focused on seven young adult male ex-offenders in Sekhukhune district, aged between 24 and 34 years who returned to their families after incarceration, and explored, described and interpreted the meaning, benefits, challenges and coping strategies of the young adult males in regard to their family re-entry processes.

Returning to Crime: Individual and Community Effects on Recidivism

TL;DR: This paper used hierarchical logistic regression to identify if individual variable effects are mediated by the degree of concentrated disadvantage in the community they return to, and event history analyses were used to build life tables demonstrating recidivism rates for each race and sex group over time.

Factors associated with voluntary HIV testing and serostatus among North Carolina state prisoners, 2004--2006

TL;DR: Receipt of an HIV test ranged widely across intake prisons, and many male inmates with documented risk of infection were never tested.
Book ChapterDOI

Success and Failure in Education and Criminal Justice: Identifying Common Mechanisms

TL;DR: This paper provided a literature review of research that investigates the relationship between the United States education and criminal justice systems from a sociological perspective, exploring mechanisms that have been identified as leading to successes and failures within the two respective institutions.