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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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Book ChapterDOI

The Desistance Paradigm in Correctional Practice: From Programmes to Lives

Shadd Maruna
TL;DR: For instance, at a recent National Institute of Justice Annual Conference, US Attorney General Eric Holder warmed many academic hearts in the room when he said:Let me be clear: this administration shares your belief in the power of evidence-based research to help address some of our nation's most significant challenges as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Experimental Evaluation of a Comprehensive Employment-Oriented Prisoner Re-entry Program

TL;DR: This article presented a randomized controlled trial (RCT) of a re-entry program that combines post-release subsidized work with "reach-in" social services provided prior to release.
Journal ArticleDOI

An integrative theory of desistance from sex offending

TL;DR: The Integrated Theory of Desistance from Sex Offending as mentioned in this paper describes the desistance process in four phases: decisive momentum (initial desistance), rehabilitation, re-entry, and normalcy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Maternal Distress and Women's Reentry into Family and Community Life

TL;DR: Findings suggest that depressive symptomology persisted and worsened for mothers in this study and that maternal distress was indicative not only of women's psychological state, but also a relational and situational construct that embodied women's core experience.

From Prison to Work: The Employment Dimensions of Prisoner Reentry

TL;DR: The fifth Reentry Roundtable as discussed by the authors focused on policies, practices, problems, and incentives involved in connecting returning prisoners to meaningful employment, and five discussion papers and four presentations were commissioned and combined with the discussions that came out of the Roundtable and additional literature from the field, form the conceptual framework for the monograph addressing prisoner reentry and work.