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Prisoner Reentry

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Administered by OJPPrisonerReentryCompiled byNational Criminal Justice Reference ServiceJuly 7, 2005Additional resources are available on our Web site: http://www.ncjrs.org. For criminal justice assistance, please e-mail us at: http://askncjrs.ncjrs.orgOffice of Justice Programs Sponsored PublicationsGuide for Developing Housing for Ex-Offenders. CCDO, 5/2004, NCJ 203374.http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/ccdo/pdftxt/NCJ203374.pdfThe Office of Justice Programs organized a focus group to examine the issues related to developing a guide for providing housing to ex-offenders. The population to be served by the guide is a critical question. The decision of who will be served by the housing is based on: housing needs, available housing programs, and key stakeholders. The type of housing to be provided will define plans by deciding if the focus will be on temporary, intermediate, or long-term facilities, or a combination of these.Applying Problem Solving Approaches to Issues of Inmate Re-Entry: The Indianapolis Pilot Project, Final Report. NIJ-Sponsored, 2/2004, NCJ 203923.http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/nij/grants/203923.pdfThis report describes the implementation and evaluation of the Indianapolis Violence Reduction Partnership (IVRP), which used a problem-solving approach to reduce recidivism among former inmates.Reentry Courts Process Evaluation (Phase 1), Final Report. NIJ-Sponsored, 10/2003, NCJ 202472.http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/nij/grants/202472.pdfThis document presents an evaluation of the Office of Justice Programs’(OJP) Reentry Court Initiative (RCI), which establishes a system of offender accountability and support services throughout the reentry process.Offender's Views of Reentry: Implications for Processes, Programs, and Services . NIJ-Sponsored, 3/2002, NCJ 196490.http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/nij/grants/196490.pdfPart of a series of evaluations by the Reentry Partnership Initiative (RPI), this paper, sponsored by the Office of Justice Programs and the U.S. Department of Justice, focuses on problems faced by offenders who return to communities after a period of incarceration.From Prison Safety to Public Safety: Innovations in Offender Reentry . NIJ-Sponsored, 3/2002, NCJ 196464.http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/nij/grants/196464.pdfThis paper is part of a formative evaluation series on the Reentry Partnership Initiatives (RPI) which focus on reducing the recidivism of offenders and includes cooperative efforts between criminal justice, social services, and community groups to implement a reentry process for ex-inmates.Emerging Roles and Responsibilities in the Reentry Partnership Initiative: New Ways of Doing Business . NIJ-Sponsored, 3/2002, NCJ 196441.http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/nij/grants/196441.pdfThis is a report on the evaluation of the Reentry Partnership Initiative (RPI) -- a Federal program that includes the formation of a partnership between criminal justice, social service, and community groups to develop and implement a re-entry process for offenders -- conducted to examine how the eight demonstration sites implemented the RPI, with a focus on the organizational development across agencies to construct new offender re-entry processes.Engaging the Community in Offender Reentry . NIJ-Sponsored, 2/2002, NCJ 196492.http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/nij/grants/196492.pdfHighlighting ways to engage the community in offender reentry, this report is a part of a series on reentry initiatives sponsored by the Office of Justice Programs and the U.S. Department of Justice.Targeting for Reentry: Matching Needs and Services to Maximize Public Safety . NIJ-Sponsored, 2/2002, NCJ 196491.http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/nij/grants/196491.pdfFocusing on public safety issues upon offenders’ return to communities after incarceration, this paper is a part of a series on reentry initiatives sponsored by the Office of Justice Programs and the U.S. Department of Justice.Drugs, Incarceration and Neighborhood Life: The Impact of Reintegrating Offenders into the Community . NIJ-Sponsored, 2/2001, NCJ 195173.http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/nij/grants/195173.pdfThis qualitative study investigated the aggregate impact of incarceration on the quality of community life in areas with high concentrations of resident incarceration.When Prisoners Return to the Community: Political, Economic, and Social Consequences.NIJ, 11/2000, NCJ 184253.http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/nij/184253.pdfChanges in sentencing practices, coupled with a decrease in prison rehabilitation programs, have placed new demands on the parole system. This NIJ Sentencing & Corrections Research in Brief examines the state of parole in today's corrections environment—from indeterminate and determinate sentencing polices to investing in prisoner reentry programs. Specifically, the report analyzes the following collateral consequences involved with recycling parolees in and out of families and communities: community cohesion and social disorganization, work and economic well-being, family matters, mental and physical health, political alienation, and housing and homelessness.Religiousness and Post-Release Community Adjustment Graduate Research Fellowship -Final Report. NIJ-Sponsored, 9/2000, NCJ 184508.http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/nij/grants/184508.pdfThis study assessed the effect of inmate religiosity on post-release community adjustment and investigated the circumstances under which these effects were most likely to take place.But They All Come Back: Rethinking Prisoner Reentry. NIJ, 5/2000, NCJ 181413.http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/nij/181413.pdfOutlines a reentry model and elements needed to make it work. This NIJ Research in Brief discusses the processes and goals of reentry—a nearly universal experience for criminal defendants, not just returning prisoners. Reentry management approaches that reintegrate offenders into the community and prevent recurring antisocial behavior are explored and the need for the judiciary to play a greater role emphasized. Current briefs in this series of eight that distill what has been learned from the Executive Sessions on Sentencing and Corrections also focus on how technological forces are converging with the forces of law and order to create "technocorrections," the drug court approach and its evolution, and the "parallel universe" approach to prison management.Reintegration, Supervised Release, and Intensive Aftercare. OJJDP, 8/1999, NCJ 175715.http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/175715.pdfThe


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