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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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The Rise of Criminal Background Screening in Rental Housing

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the recent rise of criminal background screening in rental housing as a case study of the diffusion of actuarial social control, concluding that actuarial techniques have spread more widely through the crime prevention field than sociolegal scholars have recognized, replacing disciplinary efforts to diagnose and alter the behavior of individuals with actuarial efforts to identify and isolate high risk groups.
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The effect of prison visitation on reentry success: A meta-analysis

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of prison visitation on recidivism was evaluated using meta-analysis techniques put forth by the Campbell Collaboration, and 16 studies were assessed to determine the overall mean effect of visitation and important moderator effects on this relationship.
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The Role of Transformation Narratives in Desistance Among Released Lifers

TL;DR: This paper emphasized the importance of the transformation narrative, in which the individual has replaced his old, criminal self with a new, law-abiding self Key elements of the trans desistance narrative.
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Women Disrupting a Marginalized Identity: Subverting the Parolee Identity through Narrative:

TL;DR: The authors used in-depth interviews to examine the identity work of forty-three women newly released from prison who live in their communities under the supervision of parole. Drawing on hegemoni...
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Prisoner Reintegration and the Stigma of Prison Time Inscribed on the Body

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that the experience of reintegration after release from prison is similarly embodied and corporeal, and identify specific examples of prison time being inscribed on the body which prove problematic for former prisoners, and demonstrate the ways in which their attempts to erase or overwrite these inscriptions constitute a stage in the continual corporeal process of becoming.