Parolees' physical closeness to health service providers: a study of California parolees.
TLDR
Examining the relative physical closeness to health providers of parolees based on their demographic and prior offending characteristics suggests inequity in access to services, as minority parolees and those with greater needs may live near more impacted providers.About:
This article is published in Health & Place.The article was published on 2009-09-01 and is currently open access. It has received 36 citations till now.read more
Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
Incarceration, prisoner reentry, and communities
TL;DR: This review focuses on two complementary questions regarding incarceration, prisoner reentry, and communities: whether and how mass incarceration has affected the social and economic structure of American communities, and how residential neighborhoods affect thesocial and economic reintegration of returning prisoners.
Journal ArticleDOI
Parolee Recidivism in California: The Effect of Neighborhood Context and Social Service Agency Characteristics
TL;DR: The authors studied a sample of reentering parolees in California in 2005-2006 to examine whether the social structural context of the census tract, as well as nearby tracts, along with the relative physical closeness of social service providers affects serious recidivism resulting in imprisonment.
Journal ArticleDOI
Punishment Regimes and the Multilevel Effects of Parental Incarceration: Intergenerational, Intersectional, and Interinstitutional Models of Social Inequality and Systemic Exclusion
TL;DR: This paper developed a multilevel social exclusion framework to stimulate future research on the effects of paternal and maternal incarceration on child outcomes and emphasized the underresearched importance of meso-level and macro-level exclusionary and inclusionary regimes in understanding the ef...
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Imprisoning communities: how mass incarceration makes disadvantaged neighborhoods worse
Journal ArticleDOI
Mental Health and Substance Abuse Service Engagement by Men and Women During Community Reentry Following Incarceration
TL;DR: Findings indicate that services were engaged at a lower-than-needed rate and barriers were greater for individuals leaving jails compared to prison or CBCF and Exploratory factor analysis of the barriers instrument is presented.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI
Revisiting the behavioral model and access to medical care: does it matter?
TL;DR: The Behavioral Model of Health Services Use was initially developed over 25 years ago and is reviewed and assessed for continued relevance.
Journal ArticleDOI
The truly disadvantaged : the inner city, the underclass, and public policy
TL;DR: Wilson's "The Truly Disadvantaged" as mentioned in this paper was one of the sixteen best books of 1987 and won the 1988 C. Wright Mills Award of the Society for the Study of Social Problems.
Book
When Prisoners Come Home: Parole and Prisoner Reentry
TL;DR: In this paper, a profile of returning prisoners is presented, along with a discussion of the changing nature of Parole Supervision and Services, and the role of the victim's role in prisoner reentry.
Journal Article
Gender differences in the utilization of health care services.
TL;DR: Women have higher medical care service utilization and higher associated charges than men, and these findings have implications for health care.
Journal ArticleDOI
Fixed–Effects Negative Binomial Regression Models
TL;DR: The authors showed that the conditional negative binomial model for panel data, proposed by Hausman, Hall, and Griliches (1984), is not a true fixed-effects method.
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