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Reentry Central is the national website for news and information on the subject of reentry and related criminal justice issues. Each day our editors complete a full national roundup of important news, research, and articles on the field of reentry. The site contains extensive information on:
The site also provides, through arrangement with Amazon, a full library of books and publications available for purchase in the reentry field. Subscriptions to Reentry Central are available at $30 per year for individual subscriptions, and $100 per year for corporate subscriptions. Corporate subscriptions allow access to unlimited subscriptions delivered to email addresses at the same URL. |
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News and Featured Stories
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Subscribe NOW Reentry Central is the nation's leading non-governmental source on reentry news, information, grants, jobs and resources. |
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| Colorado Using Telemedicine to Reduce Inmate Healthcare Costs Some “bumps in the road” foreseen as new program is implemented Read More 06-19-2013 |
| Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, Trauma and Comorbid Psychiatric Disorders in Detained Youth Report suggests that witnessing violence can perpetuate cycle of violence Read More 06-17-2013 |
| Michael Suede: Why We Need Prison Reform Is the government “squandering money” to incarcerate those who commit victimless crimes, and making citizens pay for it? Read More 06-14-2013 |
| Reentry, Redemption and Running for Mayor Sundiata Keitazulu wants to deconstruct the criminal justice system and rebuild it to work effectively Read More 06-13-2013 |
| Michigan Department of Corrections Receives Grant for Post-Secondary Education for Inmates Educational and vocational programs to be offered as way to reduce recidivism Read More 06-12-2013 |
| Sesame Street Introduces a New Character with Whom 2.7 Million Children Can Identify Having an incarcerated parent affects one of every 28 children in America Read More 06-11-2013 |
| Colorado Prison Review Finds Over Half of Prison Sentences Contain Errors Hopes and dreams dashed as some released inmates are rounded up and sent back behind bars Read More 06-10-2013 |
| War on Marijuana Accounted for One Arrest every 37 seconds in 2010 Of these arrests, Blacks were almost four times more likely to be charged than Whites Read More 06-07-2013 |
| Which State Has the Most Incarcerated Black Males? If you named a state in the Deep South, guess again Read More 06-06-2013 |
| Faith Based Organizations are Offered Information on Reentry and Building Strong Fatherhood Programs Webinars provide expert advice when dealing with reentrants and their families Read More 06-05-2013 |
| Senator Vitter’s Amendment Spurs Call to Action Against It Critics predict serious collateral consequences if lifetime SNAP ban is implemented Read More 06-04-2013 |
| California Facing More Prison Woes Lawyers claim mentally ill prisoners are being physically abused Read More 06-03-2013 |
| Results of First Nationwide Survey on Recovery from Alcohol and Drug Abuse Published Faces and Voices of Recovery finds that one in ten Americans is in recovery Read More 05-31-2013 |
| Best Practice Standards for Employers Hiring Individuals with Criminal History Reentry advocates and legal experts answer call by employers to determine the correct way to use background checks in hiring decisions Read More 05-30-2013 |
| Nine million Americans Cycle through Jails Each Year New toolkit offers information on jail-to-community transition Read More 05-29-2013 |
| Click here for archived news stories. |
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Sesame Street: Little Children, Big Challenges: Incarceration -- Sizzle Reel |
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| Highlights from Sesame Street's new initiative: Little Children, Big Challenges: Incarceration. Alex talks with Abby Cadabby, Rosita, and Sofia about his dad's incarceration, real families with young children share their own experiences with parental incarceration, and an animation shows a family's trip to visit a parent in prison. |
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Marijuana Busts: ACLU Report Lays Bare Truth About 'Racist' National Drug Policy |
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| MSNBC segment on a new ACLU report that shows a Black person is 3.73 times more likely to be arrested for marijuana possession than a White person, even though Blacks and Whites use marijuana at similar rates. |
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Overview of Cost-Effectiveness of Substance Abuse Treatment in Criminal Justice Settings |
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| The unfortunate synergy between criminal activity and drug use persists as a major challenge to public health and public safety systems. Today, half of the 2 million people incarcerated in state and federal prisons meet the criteria for drug dependence or abuse. |
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From Arrest to Homecoming, Addressing the Needs of Children of Incarcerated |
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| This webinar covered the emotional and physical needs of children of incarcerated parents and the complex family dynamics among children, incarcerated parents, and caregivers. Practical tips and sample resources developed by experienced service providers, such as co-parenting agreements, were shared. |
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DA Hynes Announces a Home-Based Alternative To Incarceration Program For Women |
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| D.A. Hynes will train staff to recognize the gender-specific needs of women in the criminal justice system. |
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Angela Arboleda of National Council of La Raza |
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| Angela Arboleda, National Council of La Raza, on the disproportionate number of Latinos in the juvenile justice system. |
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The hope and belief of The If Project |
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Martin Horn: "Five Research Questions I Want Answered" |
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New Beginnings, Laurel, MD |
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Life in Prison |
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Second Thoughts on Three Strikes |
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More News
For the most recent news and developments related to prisoner reentry, please visit our "News" section which is updated daily and emailed weekly to our mailing list.
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Executive Director
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Dr. Sandra Martin is the Executive Director of One Million Americans, Ltd. , a national non-profit organization dedicated to criminal justice reform. She is the founder of Reentry Central, the national website on reentry published by One Million Americans. Dr. Martin is a lifelong entrepreneur, having founded numerous public and private companies in the fields of real estate, educational publishing, and direct mail merchandizing. She is a well-known motivational speaker, and has served as a consultant to such companies and organizations as American Express, McDonalds, and Junior Achievement. Dr. Martin has devoted much of her life to teaching and helping others less fortunate than herself. She is dedicated to helping reverse the damage caused by America's zealous use of incarceration as a one-size-fits-all sanction for non-violent offenders.Dr. Martin graduated from Mount Holyoke College. She has a Master's Degree in education from Springfield College, a PhD from the University of Connecticut, and a JD from Quinnipiac School of Law. |
Dr. Sandra Martin |
Program Director/Managing Editor
| Beatrice Codianni Program Director/Managing Editor Bcodianni@reentrycentral.org |
A political/community activist for over 40 years, Beatrice has been a part of many diverse social justice movements. Certified in Community Mediation and HIV/AIDS Outreach Education, she has also worked extensively with disenfranchised youth, creating and implementing programs in the areas of education, employment, mental and physical health, and violence reduction.
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Library of Resources |
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The Reentry Central Library is intended to be a ready resource for professionals and others interested in the field of prisoner reentry. The aim of this library is to provide a succinct compendium of the leading articles, research studies, and profiles of best practices in the field. If you know of a resource which deserves to be listed on our library, please email us with your suggestion, and we will evaluate it for inclusion into our library. We look forward to receiving your suggestions. |
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List of Resources |
| 2011 SAMHSA Survey Results on Drug Use and Health The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) issued a new report, Results from the 2011 Survey on Drug Use and Health: Summary of National Findings, based on a survey of over 67.000 people concerning their use of tobacco, alcohol and illicit drugs. While this survey was not offered to incarcerated individuals, those working with individuals with a criminal history might find it useful in their work. View Link |
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| A Call to Action: Safeguarding New York's Children of Incarcerated Parents An Osborne Association report that details the negative, and sometimes, life-long effects parental incarceration can have on a child. The report makes several recommendations that law enforcement agencies, working in conjunction with children and family aid agencies, can do to protect these children. View Link |
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| A Case Study of 8 American Cities (How Reducing Violent Crime Raises the Economy) A Center for American Progress report that looks at the economic costs of violent crime View Link |
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| A Reentry Education Model: Supporting Education and Career Advancement for Low-Skill Individuals in Corrections The U.S. Department of Education has released a report concerning the creation of a correctional education reentry model that will bring community-based educational and job training programs into a correctional setting in an effort to provide inmates with the skills they need to be employment-ready when they are released. View Link |
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| Addicted to Courts: How a Growing Dependence on Drug Courts Impacts People and Communities A Justice Policy Institute that examines the effectiveness of drug courts View Link |
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| Addressing the Collateral Consequences of Convictions for Young Offenders Dr. Ashley Nellis, research analyst for the Sentencing Project, provides a comprehensive discussion of the impact of a conviction for young people who break the law. This includes bans on accessing education, housing, and public benefits, as well as placement on various community notification registries. Dr Nellis offers suggestions on how the juvenile justice system can get back to its roots of rehabilitation, not sanctions. View Link |
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| Adults With Behavioral Health Needs Under Correctional Supervision: A Shared Framework for Reducing Recidivism and Promoting Recovery Council of State Governments Justice Center report designed for professionals working with corrections-involved clients who have “substance abuse issues or mental health disorders View Link |
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| At America's Expense: The Mass Incarceration of the Elderly An ACLU report on thigh cost of incarcerating the elderly in America. View Link |
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| Attitudes of US Voters Toward Non-Serious Offenders and Alternatives to Incarceration A large number of Americans support alternatives to incarceration for non-violent, non-serious offenses. View Link |
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| Back to School Guide for Formerly Incarcerated Persons John Jay College of Criminal Justice, Prison Reentry Institute created a planning and information guide for formerly incarcerated persons who would like to continue their education. The guide provides a wealth of information on a variety of topics related to going back to school after imprisonment. View Link |
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| Bail Fail: Why the U.S. Should End the Practice of Money for Bail Justice Policy Institute explains why the U.S. should rethink its bail system policy. View Link |
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| Banking on Bondage: Private Prisons and Mass Incarceration The ACLU examines private prisons in America. The report is divided into three parts. Part one follows the rise in private prisons since the 1980’s. Part two exposes the myth that privatization is a safe and cost effective way to incarcerate individuals, and part three reveals how private prison companies use cunning strategies to win support to build, or take over, more and more prisons. View Link |
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| Breaking Schools’ Rules: A Statewide Study of How School Discipline Relates to Students’ Success and Juvenile Justice Involvement A Council of State Governments and the Public Policy Research Institute of Texas A & M University report on the heavy consequences suffered by students expelled or suspended from school as it relates to the juvenile justice system. View Link |
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| Brennan Center Highlights Impact of Criminal Records on the Economy Response by the Brennan Center to the solicitation of comments by the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights focus on discrimination, and the negative impact on the economy and public safety. View Link |
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| Broken Records: How Errors by Criminal Background Checking Companies Harm Workers and Businesses The National Consumer Law Center report reveals the negative impact inaccurate information can have on job seekers, businesses and the economy. View Link |
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| Campaign for Youth Justice Youth Justice System Survey Survey finds most Americans support youth justice system reform. View Link |
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| Childhood Disrupted: Understanding the Effects of Maternal Incarceration Volunteers of America put together a study that examines how the incarceration rate of mothers has steadily risen, and the effect maternal incarceration has on children of the inmates. View Link |
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| Children of Incarcerated Parents Fact Sheet National Resource Center on Children and Families of the Incarcerated fact sheet View Link |
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| Children on the Outside: Voicing the Pain and Human Costs of Parental Incarceration An informative report on the hidden, and not so hidden, problems that children of incarcerated parents face. View Link |
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| Closing the Gap: Using Criminal Justice and Public Health Data to Improve the Identification of Mental Illness Vera Institute’s Substance Use and Mental Health program poured over data collected in 2008 from four Washington, D.C. criminal justice agencies and the Department of Mental Health to determine the mental health needs of arrestees and to assess if those needs were being met. View Link |
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| Collateral Costs: Incarceration's Effect on Economic Mobility A report by Pew's Economic Policy Group and the Pew Center on the States looks at the many collateral costs of incarcerating 2.3 million Americans, particularly the impact on economic mobility. View Link |
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| Collateral Damage: Incarceration of Veterans An article by Michael J. Fitzpatrick of the National Alliance on Mental Health (NAMI), and Tracy Velazquez,of the Justice Policy Institute (JPI),on the reasons veterans get involved in criminal behavior, and how those of us concerned with criminal justice reform might step outside the boundaries of our normal reentry activities to give support to veterans organizations who aim to keep veterans from committing crimes in the first place. View Link |
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| Coming Home and No Place to Live Coming Home and No Place to Live: Understanding Perceptions Among Public Housing Residents about the Reintergration of Formerly Incarcerated Individuals to These Locations is a Harlem Community and Academic Partnership study study that asked residents to participate in research that sought to determine what, if any, barriers to reentry they believed their neighbors were facing. View Link |
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| Connecticut Regional Institute for the 21st Century: Assessment of Connecticut's Correction, Parole and Probation Systems A comprehensive research report on the Connecticut Criminal Justice System. View Link |
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| Continuing Fiscal Crisis in Corrections - Setting a New Course Staff from Vera’s Center on Sentencing and Corrections assessed spending plans for fiscal year 2011 and reviewed state legislative action over the preceding decade to identify trends in corrections policies. The resulting report can help legislators and other policy makers understand states’ responses both to the fiscal crisis and to unsatisfactory outcomes of earlier corrections policies and investments. An interactive map and chart show related data about states’ corrections appropriations in fiscal year 2011 and changes since the previous year. View Link |
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| Correctional Population in the United States U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics report on decline of prison population during Fiscal Year 2010 View Link |
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| Cost-Effectiveness of Diacetylmorphine Versus Methadone for Chronic Opioid Dependence Refractory to Treatment A Canadian study shows that "intractable" addicts can benefit from a clinically supervised medical heroin program. View Link |
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| Council of State Governments Justice Center: States Report Reductions in Recidivism A September 25, 2012 Council of State Governments (CSG) Justice Center’s National Reentry Resource Center (NRRC) policy brief detailing how several states successfully reduced recidivism. CSG claims that bipartisan co-operation in Kansas, Michigan, Mississippi, Ohio, Oregon, Texas, and Vermont allowed important legislation to be passed, thereby bringing about “significant reductions in recidivism.” View Link |
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| Cracked Justice The Sentencing Project report on the fight to fix state laws that still include sentencing disparities between crack cocaine and powder cocaine convictions. View Link |
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| Criminal Justice Debt: A Barrier to Reentry The Brennan Center for Justice reports that while debtors' prisons are unconstitutional, some states put formerly incarcerated persons back in prison if they cannot pay their legal debts. View Link |
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| Criminal Justice Trends: Key Legislative Changes in Sentencing Policy, 2001 - 2010 Since 2001, many state legislatures have changed their criminal sentencing policies, increasingly emphasizing approaches that are “smart on crime.” The three main areas of legislative reform involve redefining and reclassifying criminal offenses, strengthening alternatives to incarceration, and reducing prison terms. This report is a reference for legislators, their staff, and other policy makers who may be considering or implementing similar changes in sentencing statutes and policies. View Link |
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| Cutting Corrections Costs: Earned Time Policies for State Prisoners A National Council of State Legislatures report that describes the types of earned credit, and also provides information on why earned credit is beneficial, both financially, and as a matter of public safety. View Link |
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| Data-Driven Decision Making for Strategic Justice Reinvestment Urban Institute Policy Brief View Link |
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| Doe Fund Guide to Hiring Qualified People with Convictions in New York Tips on how to fairly evaluate a job applicant can be used in other states View Link |
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| Education Under Arrest: The Case Against Police in Schools A report issued by the Justice Policy Institute reveals that when schools have law enforcement on site, students are more likely to get arrested by police instead of having discipline handled by school officials. This leads to more kids being funneled into the juvenile justice system, which is both expensive and associated with negativea impact on youth. View Link |
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| Employing Your Mission: Building Cultural Competence in Reentry Service Agencies The full title of this collaborative effort between The Fortune Society and the Prison Reentry Institute at John Jay college is Employing Your Mission: Building Cultural Competence in Reentry Service Agencies Through the Hiring of Individuals who are Formerly Incarcerated and/or in Recovery This toolkit outlines how organizations can successfully employ men and women with criminal histories. The toolkit was praised by U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder as "a national model for reentry agencies." View Link |
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| Enhancing Linkages to HIV Primary Care and Services in Jail Settings Initiative: Transitional Care Coordination - From Incarceration to the Community How Corrections and the Community can collaborate to help HIV+ inmates transition back to the community, and provide necessary services. View Link |
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| Entrepreneurship and Prisoner Reentry: The Development of a Concept Supporting formerly incarcerated persons in their effort to become self-employed can reduce recidivism,cut back welfare rolls and aid the economy. View Link |
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| Evaluation of the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction and Corporation for Supportive Housing's Pilot Program: Interim Rearrest Analysis An Urban Institute Research Report to ascertain if the availability supportive housing for newly released prisoners can cut down the recidivism rate. View Link |
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| Ex-Offenders and the Labor Market A Center for Economic and Policy Research report that looks at how the U.S. loses up to $65 billion a year in lost output because convicted felons have a difficult time obtaining employment. View Link |
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| Exploring the Role of the Police in Prisoner Reentry A paper issued by the National Institute of Justice suggests that police can take a more active role in promoting public safety. Community policing programs are gaining attention as a method to reduce crime. Jeremy Travis, Ronald Davis and Sarah Lawrence write that when police engage with reentry initiatives, recidivism rates can be reduced. View Link |
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| Fact Sheet on Parents in Prison Sentencing Project fact sheet on parents in prison also provides a list of “missed opportunities for intervention,” before and after incarceration. View Link |
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| FAQ: Communities and Families Involved with the Criminal Justice System The National Reentry Resource Center's Committee on Communities and Families has put together a lists of Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) for those who are, or were, involved in the criminal justice system, their families and friends, community members and reentry professionals. View Link |
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| Fenced In: HIV/AIDS in the US Criminal Justice System Gay Men’s Health Crisis, Inc. (GMHC) has issued a new and detailed report on HIV/AIDS in prison, demonstrating that even though the death and infection rates among inmates have declined, HIV/AIDS still exists, and existing issues deserve further attention. View Link |
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| Findings on Best Practices of Community Re-entry Programs for Previously Incarcerated Persons Research on program models and best practices of programs serving formerly incarcerated persons. View Link |
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| First Annual Report of the New York City Young Men’s Initiative Created by NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg, the Young Men's Initiative is designed to give young men of color opportunities that will allow them to succeed, and in doing so stay out of the criminal justice system. View Link |
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| For Better or for Profit: How the Bail Bonding Industry Stands in the Way of Fair and Effective Pretrial Justice Another Justice Policy Institute report that concludes that the bail bonding system keeps low-income individuals in jail for long periods of time because they cannot afford to pay for their release and at the expense of taxpayers. View Link |
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| From Classroom to Community Education, both in-prison and post release, can have an effect on recidivism. View Link |
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| From Protection to Punishment: Post Conviction Barriers for Domestic Violence Survivors-Defendants In New York State A report by the Avon Global Center for Women and Justice at Cornell Law School and the Women in Prison Project of the Correctional Association of New York. View Link |
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| Gaming the System: How the Political Strategies of Private Prison Companies Promote Ineffective Incarceration Policies New report by the Justice Policy Institute highlights political strategies of companies working to make money through harsh policies and longer sentences. View Link |
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| Gang Prevention: An Overview of Research and Programs This Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention bulletin examines gangs, and provides answers to questions such as why young people join gangs, and to how communities can prevent young people from becoming gang members. View Link |
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| GAO Report to Congress: Bureau of Prisons, Growing Inmate Crowding Negatively Affects Inmates, Staff and Infrastucture The growth in the federal prison population is largely due to the high number of federal prisoners sentenced under harsh drug laws. View Link |
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| GAO Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act Report Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act Report: Jurisdictions Face Challenges to Implementing the Act, and Stakeholders Report Positive and Negative Effects. A GAO report “covering issues related to implementation of the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA)." View Link |
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| Going it Alone: The Story of the Intensive Alternative to Custody Pilots The prison population in England and Wales exploded in 2007, causing the National Offender Management Service (NOMS) to take action to reduce the number of inmates in the criminal justice system of those two countries. As an executive agency of the Ministry of Justice, NOMS goals are twofold: to keep correctional costs down, and to rehabilitate prisoners. View Link |
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| Guide For New York State Employers This guide explains the law and provides guidance to employers on how to apply Article 23-A when making hiring decisions.It also relates how companies can better protect their businesses from negligent hiring claims. View Link |
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| Healing a Broken System: Veterans and the War on Drugs This report examines the plight of returning veterans who struggle with incarceration and psychological wounds of war such as addiction and post-traumatic stress disorder – and suggests reforms that could improve the health and preserve the freedom of American soldiers returning from war zones and transitioning back to civilian life. View Link |
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| Health and Prisoner Reentry: How Physical, Mental and Substance Abuse Conditions Shape the Process of Reentry Recognizing and correcting obstacles to reentry. View Link |
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| HIV in Prisons, 2001 - 2010 A Bureau of Justice Statistics report announcing that the rate of HIV/AIDS and AIDS related deaths have declined from 2001 through 2010. The report was written by BJS statistician Laura M. Maruschak. View Link |
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| How the Fortune Society Achieved a Triple Bottom Line with Castle Gardens The Fortune Society Offers a Toolkit on Successful Transitional Housing for Individuals with a Criminal Background View Link |
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| How to Safely Reduce Prison Populations and Support People Returning to Their Communities The Justice Policy Institute issued a fact sheet In June 2010 which proposes that effective programs can save taxpayers money and reduce the incarceration rate while providing public safety. View Link |
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| Implications of Federal Health Legislation on Justice-Involved Populations A Justice Center Council of State Governments FAQ on what the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act will mean for formerly incarcerated persons in need of medical care. View Link |
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| Improving Strategic Planning Through Collaborative Bodies Urban Institute Policy Brief View Link |
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| In For A Penny: The Rise of America's New Debtors' Prisons The ACLU reports that those who are unable to pay their legal debts when they are released from prison are sent back, creating the reemergence of debtors' prisons View Link |
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| In Our Backyard – Overcoming Community Resistance to Reentry Housing A toolkit that helps organizations seeking to provide safe and affordable housing for formerly incarcerated persons. This collaborative effort by the Prison Reentry Institute at John Jay College and the Fortune Society was praised by U.S. Attorney General Holder as being a model for other organizations to follow. View Link |
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| Jail Inmates at Midyear 2010 – Statistical Tables (NCJ 233431 Bureau of Justice Statistics report on the decrease in jail population in 2010 View Link |
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| Justice Policy Institute Fact Sheet: Doing the Same Thing and Expecting a Different reult Fact sheet shows waste of time, effort and money in criminal justice reform efforts View Link |
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| Leave No Veteran Left Behind The Howard League for Penal Reform, the oldest penal reform charity in Britain, released the initial findings of its cross-national report Leave No Veteran Behind this morning. It examines what Britain's military can learn from the American military's approach to treating veterans after they leave the services View Link |
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| Life After Prison:Tracking the Experiences of Male Prisoners Returning to Chicago, Cleveland, and Houston An Urban Institute Justice Policy Center report that studies 652 individuals shortly before their release from prison, and then at two- and seven- months after release to see if their pre-release expectations of finding housing and employment matched the reality of their present situation. View Link |
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| Life in Limbo: An Examination of Parole Release for Prisoners Serving Life Sentences with the Possibility of Parole in California Stanford Criminal Justice Center report that looks at the problem of keeping prisoners incarcerated for the reat of their lives. View Link |
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| Lifetime Lockdown: How Isolation Conditions Impact Prisoner Reentry The American Friends Service Committee report looks at the effects solitary confinement has on reentrants. View Link |
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| Mapping the Intersections: Criminal Justice Involvement and Food Insecurity in
New York City How does a poor diet relate to reentry? The physical ailments associated with poor nutrition might prevent someone from being hired, or from keeping a job. The report states that poor nutrition contributes to aggression, anxiety and depression, and also decreases one’s productivity. With the other road blocks face, being food insecure can add another barrier to successful reentry. View Link |
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| Measuring the Effect of Defense Counsel on Homicide Case Outcomes A new report funded by the National Institute of Justice finds that members of the Defender Association of Philadelphia had an almost 20 percent higher rate of reducing murder convictions than lawyers who were appointed. View Link |
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| Mentoring Ex-Prisoners: A Guide for Prisoner Reentry Programs A grant from the U.S. Department of Labor was instrumental for the creation of Mentoring Ex-Prisoners: A Guide for Prisoner Reentry Programs, a useful tool for those wishing to use their faith to give faith to others. View Link |
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| Mentoring Formerly Incarcerated Adults A Ready4Work study that explores how mentoring in the area of employment aids the formerly incarcerated to reenter successfully. View Link |
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| Mortality Rates of Inmates in U.S. Prisons U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics report on inmate death rates in state and federal prisons. Suicide is the leading cause of inmate deaths. View Link |
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| Mothers Behind Bars: A State by State Report Card and Analysis Mothers Behind Bars: A State-by-State Report Card and Analysis of Federal Policies on Confinement for Pregnant and Parenting Women and the Effect on Their Children is a report issued by The Rebecca Project for Human Rights and The National Women's Law Center concerning the abysmal care pregnant inmates receive before, during and after birth. View Link |
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| Moving Toward a Public Safety Paradigm: A Roundtable Discussion on Victims and Criminal Justice Reform A Justice Policy Institute report on who is a victim,the history and current status of the victims' movement and issues and services for victims. View Link |
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| National Justice Atlas of Corrections and Sentencing An online, interactive, mapping utility that gives policy makers, the media, researchers and the public a neighborhood-level view of where prison inmates and offenders on probation and parole are from and where corrections spending is highest. View Link |
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| National Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Coalition: Recommendations for Juvenile Justice Reform A recommendation to the 112th Congress on how to make the juvenile justice system can be reformed and why it needs strong federal leadership. View Link |
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| National Reentry Resource Center Policy Brief on States that Successfully Reduced Recidivism Council of State Governments (CSG) Justice Center’s National Reentry Resource Center (NRRC)policy brief showing how Kansas, Michigan, Mississippi, Ohio, Oregon, Texas, and Vermont made “significant reductions in recidivism.” View Link |
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| No Place for Kids: The Case for Reducing Juvenile Incarceration A new report from the Annie E. Casey Foundation containing evidence to support the assertion that incarcerating kids simply doesn't work, and that youth prisons not only do not reduce offending but they also frequently expose youth to dangerous and abusive conditions. View Link |
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| Non-Judicial Drivers into the Juvenile Justice System for Youth of Color A report funded by California Endowment (CalEndow ) takes a hard look at America’s juvenile justice system, particularly in the way young people of color are criminalized for normal childhood behaviors. View Link |
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| Offender Reentry: Correctional Statistics, Reintegration into the Community, and Recidivism Statistics and information on reentry and recidivism, and the types of programs available that support a successful reentry. Updated July 2008 View Link |
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| Old Behind Bars The Aging Prison Population in the United States Human Rights Watch report on the graying of American prisoners View Link |
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| On the Chopping Block: State Prison Closings 2012 A report issued by the Sentencing Project reveals that the move to close prisons to help reduce states’ budgets has paid off. View Link |
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| Performance Incentive Funding: Aligning Fiscal and Operational Responsibility to Produce More Safety at Less Cost According to the Vera Institute of Justice, “PIF programs are premised on the idea that if the supervision agency or locality sends fewer low-level offenders to prison—thereby causing the state to incur fewer costs—some portion of the state savings should be shared with the agency or locality. With PIF, agencies or localities receive a financial reward for delivering fewer prison commitments through reduced recidivism and revocations that, in turn, must be reinvested into evidence-based programs in the community.” View Link |
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| Pew Center Survey to Determine Views on Policy Change Regarding America’s Criminal Justice System Survey of 1,200 likely voters finds most want reduced terms and alternatives to incarceration. View Link |
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| Planning and Assessing a Law Enforcement Reentry Strategy The Council of State Governments Justice Center has put together a toolkit that instructs law enforcement agencies on how to work with community organizations to increase public safety and reduce recidivism. The toolkit has been successfully used in several cities to foster successful reentry. View Link |
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| Post-Release Employment and Recidivism Among Different Types of Offenders With A Different Level of Education: A 5-Year Follow-Up Study in Indiana The Post-Release Employment and Recidivism Among Different Types of Offenders With A Different Level of Education: A 5-Year Follow-Up Study in Indiana found that participants in the study who achieved a high education level were more likely to find employment and less likely to recidivate. View Link |
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| Practice Brief: Call-In Preparation and Execution Created by the Center for Crime Prevention and Control at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, with support from the Office of Community Policing Services (COPS), Practice Brief: Call-In Preparation and Execution is meant to be used by those professionals already involved in a creating a Group Violence Reduction Strategy (GVRS) but have not yet “called in” gang members to outline their violence reduction project. View Link |
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| Predicting Erroneous Convictions: A Social Science Approach to Miscarriages of Justice A National Institute of Justice study that sheds light on the factors that can lead to a wrongful conviction. View Link |
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| Prevalence of Violent Crime among Households with Children, 1993 - 2010 Bureau of Justice Statistics rport shows that four percent of children in the U.S. lived in a household that experienced a violent crime in 2010. View Link |
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| Prison Visitation Policies: A Fifty State Survey by Chesa Boudin, Trevor Stutz, and Aaron Littman "This paper presents a summary of the findings from the first fifty-state survey of prison visitation policies,... (and) explores the contours of how prison administrators exercise their discretion to prescribe when and how prisoners may have contact with friends and family." View Link |
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| Prisoner Reentry Mediation: Unlocking the Potential of Relationships in Tough Economic Times A guide to using mediation to help formerly incarcerated persons transition successfully. View Link |
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| Prisons, Prisoners and HIV/AIDS AVERT (AVERTing HIV and AIDS) report on HIV/AIDS among prisoners, and on how harm reduction policies can prevent transmission. View Link |
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| Probation and Parole in the United States Bureau of Justice Statistics report tracking trends in parole and probation in the U.S. View Link |
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| Process and Systems Change Evaluation Findings from the Transition from Jail to Community Initiative Transition from Jail to Community model hailed as promising Reentry Initiative for the nine million inmates who transition back into the community annually View Link |
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| Public Housing Transformation and Crime: Making the Case for Responsible Relocation Urban Institue and Emory University Study Estimates Public Housing Transformation's Effect on Crime in Atlanta and Chicago, Advancing Underatanding of Successes and Challenges View Link |
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| Pulling Levers, Focused Deterrence Strategies to Prevent Crime Office of Community-Oriented Policing Services(COPS)report on focused deterrence View Link |
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| Putting Public Safety First: 13 Strategies for Successful Supervision and Reentry Issued by the Pew Public Safety Performance Project, this public safety policy brief offers 13 strategies to reduce recidivism,cut substance abuse and unemployment while strengthening family ties, and holding the formerly incarcerated accountable. View Link |
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| Racial Disparity in the Criminal Justice Process: Prosecutors, Judges and the Effects of United States v. Booker A new paper,Racial Disparity in the Criminal Justice Process: Prosecutors, Judges and the Effects of United States v. Booker, written by Sonja B. Starr and M. Marit Rehavi for The Sentencing Project, claims that there are two “pervasive flaws” in estimating racial disparities in sentencing. View Link |
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| Racial Reconciliation, Truth-Telling and Policy Legitimacy Office of Community-Oriented Policing Services(COPS) report contains a summary of 2012 Executive Session of police-chiefs, policy-makers and others in which strategies to resolve issues between people of color and law enforcement agencies were discussed. View Link |
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| Reaching a Higher Ground: Increasing Employment Opportunities for People with Prior Convictions A University of California, Berkeley, School of Law report on how to better prepare formerly incarcerated persons for the job market. The Berkely Center for Criminal Justice compiled tips from law enforcement officers, government agencies, educational institutions and unions aimed at giving ex-offenders the job skills they need to succeed. View Link |
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| Realigning Justice Resources: A Review of Population and Spending Shifts in Prison and Community Corrections A Vera Institute Center on Sentencing and Corrections and Pew Center on the States’ Public Safety Performance Projects report View Link |
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| Recidivism Reduction Checklists The Council of State Governments Justice Center is offering what it describes as a “user friendly” series of checklists “to assess state recidivism reduction policies and strategies.” View Link |
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| Reducing Racial Disparity in the Criminal Justice System: A Manual for Practitioners and Policymakers The Sentencing Project manual on how to achieve best practices in reducing racial disparities in the criminal justice system. View Link |
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| Reevaluating Explanations for Racial Disparities Crime rates have dropped, and new laws and changes in the social structure of America have taken place, yet jails and prisons are still crammed with people of color in disproportionate numbers. Recently, The Sentencing Project provided a new report that attempts to provide answers on why racial disparity is still so prevalent. View Link |
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| Religion in Prisons: A 50-State Survey of Prison Chaplains Pew Center report on chaplains and religion in prisons in all fifty states View Link |
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| Repairing Shattered Lives: Brain Injury and its Implications for Criminal Justice The report, Repairing Shattered Lives: Brain Injury and its Implications for Criminal Justice, examines the correlation between Traumatic Brain Injury and crime, and reoffending. View Link |
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| Research Brief: California Youth Crime Plunges to All-Time Low Research by the California Department of Justice’s Criminal Justice Statistics Center (CJSC) has shown that crimes committed by youth in the state have dropped to an all-time low level. Arrests of young people under the age of 18 have declined by 20 percent from 2010 to 2011. This number is the lowest since records began being collected in 1954, according to CJSC. View Link |
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| Roadblocks to Reform, Perils for Georgia’s Criminal Justice System The Law Office of the Southern Center for Human Rights in Atlanta, Georgia has issued a report that is critical of private prison and private probation companies in the state because there is little transparency and the expected results that the companies promoted have not been met. Roadblocks to Reform, Perils for Georgia’s Criminal Justice System provides an overview of the problems, along with recommendations to correct them. View Link |
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| Rutgers University Center for Behavioral Health Services and Criminal Justice Research A series of studies providing in-depth research on specific areas regarding reentry and criminal justice. View Link |
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| Smart on Crime: Recommendations for the Administration and Congress Forty criminal justice reform organizations issue a report scrutinizing sixteen key issues that need to be addressed in the criminal justice system, and add recommendations for change. View Link |
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| Social Networks: Delinquency and Gang Membership Report Follows the Link between Young Latinos and the Gang Lifestyle View Link |
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| State Recidivism Studies Published in June 2010 by The Sentencing Project, State Recidivism Studies offers a state-by-state database of recidivism rates. Editor's note: Study can be seen clearly by clicking on Zoom button and enlarging to 125%. View Link |
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| State Reforms Promoting Employment of People with Criminal Records: 2010-2011 Legislative Round-Up The Sentencing Project, the National Employment Law Network, and the H.I.R.E. Network have collaborated on a report, State Reforms Promoting Employment of People with Criminal Records: 2010-2011 Legislative Round-Up, which offers information on laws that were passed in an effort to help those with criminal histories secure a better chance of finding a job. The report also highlights state trends, and acts as a supportive guide for lawmakers and others seeking to find ways to make the transition from prison to the community more successful. View Link |
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| State-Level Estimates of Felon Disenfranchisement in the United States, 2010 Sentencing Project report offering a state-by-state guide that provides the disenfranchisement percentage for each state. View Link |
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| Strategies for Engaging Students Involved with the Criminal Justice System The New York Reentry Education Network (NYREN) toolkit designed to aid service providers to help those with a criminal background to access education. View Link |
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| System Overload: The Costs of Under-Resourcing Public Defense System Overload: The Costs of Under-Resourcing Public Defense looks at the overburdened public defense system, and how dedicated public defenders try to provide the best defense for their clients with little available resources. The report recommends ways put in place "a more fair and effective justice system that guarantees quality representation, curtails wasteful spending practices, and decreases the overuse of incarceration." View Link |
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| The Acute Effect of Local Homicides on Children's Cognitive Performance A study by Patrick Sharkey of NYU details how exposure to violence can have disastrous effects on children. View Link |
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| The Answer is No: Too Little Compassionate Release in U.S. Federal Prisons Families Against Mandatory Minimums (FAMM) and Human Rights Watch (HRW) have released a new report, The Answer is No: Too Little Compassionate Release in U.S. Federal Prisons, which provides information on the BOP’s policy in dealing with dying inmates, and others who petition the agency for an early release. Beside the humane reason for releasing a sick or dying prisoner, financial considerations are also addressed in the report. View Link |
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| The Changing Racial Dynamics of Women’s Incarceration A new Sentencing Project report shows that the incarceration rate of black women has dropped over the period of 2000 -2009. View Link |
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| The Elected Official's Reentry Toolkit for Jail Reentry A report on how elected officials can mobilize diverse organizations and agencies to create a reentry initiative in their community, or better an existing one. View Link |
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| The Fiscal Crisis in Corrections This study examines the actions taken by several states to alleviate the fiscal crisis in corrections and examines possible alternatives to incarceration and their impact on budget reductions. View Link |
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| The Impact of Probation and Parole Populations on Arrests in Four California Cities Council of State Governments (CSG) “unprecedented study of four California districts” which recommends that law enforcement and corrections work together to lessen crimes committed by people under supervision. View Link |
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| The Influence of a Defendant’s Body Weight on Perceptions of Guilt Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at Yale University study found that female defendants who were overweight were more likely to be convicted by male jurors than thinner female defendants. View Link |
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| The Intersectionality of Race, Gender, and Reentry: Challenges for African-American Women Law Professor Geneva Brown has written a brief describing the unique problems African-American women face when they reenter their communities. View Link |
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| The Multi-Site Adult Drug Court Evaluation: Executive Summary An Urban Institute report on the correlation between Drug Courts, supportive judges, and the reduction of drug abuse and criminal behavior. View Link |
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| The Price of Prisons:What Incarceration Costs Taxpayers In its report, The Price of Prisons: What Incarceration Costs Taxpayers, the Vera Institute provides startling information about the billions of extra dollars Americans are paying outside of their states’ corrections budget to keep prisoners locked up. The information in the report was obtained from a 2010 survey in which 40 states participated. View Link |
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| The Social Reintegration of Ex-Prisoners in Council of European Member States A report by the Religious Society of Friends that details the problems facing formerly incarcerated persons in many European nations. The report offers suggestions on ways to make reentry more successful. View Link |
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| The State of Sentencing 2010: Development in Policy and Practice A Sentencing Project report that highlights reforms in 23 states and documents a growing trend to reexamine sentencing policies and scale back the use of imprisonment in order to control spending. View Link |
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| The State of Sentencing 2012: Developments in Policy and Practice A Sentencing Project report which shows what 24 states have done to help reduce incarceration, while keeping public safety at the forefront of sentencing reform. View Link |
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| The Use of Criminal History Records in College Admissions Reconsidered The Center for Community Alternative's report on how those with a criminal record are often denied admission to colleges, despite the fact that formerly incarcerated persons who obtain higher education are shown to have a lower recidivism rate. The report suggests that colleges with a policy that deny ex offenders admission should reconsider and details why. View Link |
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| Through the Diamond Threshold: Promoting Cultural Competency in Understanding American Indian Substance Abuse The Mid-America Addiction Technology Transfer Center Network (ATTC) and the Oklahoma City Area Inter-Tribal Health Board has developed an American Indian cultural awareness training curriculum with the aim of treating American Indian substance abusers. View Link |
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| Time Served: The High Cost, Low Return of Longer Prison Terms Pew Report shows that the time a person served in prison rose significantly over the last two decades and that the extra time served cost states over $10 billion dollars. The study shows that over 50 percent of those who were locked up did not commit a violent crime. Florida was at the top of the list for prison time served in 2009 with a 136 percent increase. View Link |
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| To Build a Better Justice System (Envisioning Criminal Justice Reform Twenty-Five Years from Now) To celebrate their 25th anniversary, the Sentencing Project asked some of the greatest minds in the criminal justice reform field to share their visions of the future. View Link |
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| Tracking Costs and Savings Through Justice Reinvestment Urban Institute Policy Brief View Link |
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| Tribal Youth in the Federal System A study by The Urban Institute looks at Native American youth in the federal justice system. The report, which was conducted in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Justice, sought to explore this small and largely overlooked population and the way in which these youth are handled between tribal, state, and federal justice systems. View Link |
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| U.S. Justice Report on Contacts with the Police and the Public, 2008 Report on who was stopped by the police, and for what reason. View Link |
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| U.S. Sentencing Commission report on the impact of mandatory minimums A new 645-page report by the United States Sentencing Commission examines the impact of mandatory minimum penalties on federal sentencing, the first such assessment since the Commission’s examination of this issue in 1991. The Commission concludes that “certain mandatory minimums apply too broadly, are excessively severe, and are applied inconsistently.” View Link |
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| Using Administrative Data to Prioritize Jail Reentry Services A Vera Institute of Justice Substance Use and Mental Health and New York City Department of Corrections brief. View Link |
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| Using Evidence for Public Health Decision Making: Violence Prevention Focused on Children and Youth The guide discusses evidence-based interventions that have proven to be successful View Link |
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| Venturing Beyond the Gates Venturing Beyond the gates is one of the seminal studies on entrepreneurship as a vehicle for facilitating reentry for certain offenders. View Link |
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| Vera Institute of Justice: Treatment and Reentry Practices for Sex Offenders,
An Overview of States A comprehensive report on prison-based treatment, community-based reentry and treatment, and community supervision for convicted sex offenders. The report offers a state-by-state guide of available services in prison, and in the community. View Link |
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| Veterans Treatment Courts The National Association of Drug Court Professionals offers a brief on Veterans Treatment Courts View Link |
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| Violent Youth Crime Plummets to a 30-year Low A John Jay College of Justice Research and Evaluation Center report showing a reduction in youth crime over a 30-year period. View Link |
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| Women Engaged in the Criminal Justice System Transcript of the Webinar sponsored by The National Resource Center on Justice-Involved Women (NRCJIW), the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the National Institute of Corrections which focused on best practices when working with, and treating, female prisoners. View Link |
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| Women’s Pathways to Jail: The Roles and Intersections of Serious Mental Illness and Trauma Women’s Pathways to Jail: The Roles and Intersections of Serious Mental Illness and Trauma, exposes the role mental health issues and serious mental disorders play in behaviors that lead to the arrest and conviction of an increasing number of incarcerated females. View Link |
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Shopping
Reentry Central offers books related to ex-offender reentry and the criminal justice reform.
Facts on Prisoners and Incarceration
Following is a selection of facts related to prisoners and incarceration listed by Category. Click on the category and the facts for each category will be displayed.
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Job Opportunities |
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EMPLOYERS can receive a $2,400 tax credit for hiring ex-offenders |
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Click on each job for more information. You may submit your resume to the email address listed on the job description. If you are an employer and have a job you would like listed on our Reentry Central Jobs board, please email us with your job posting and we will gladly add it. |
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Federal Bonding Program
In 1966, the U.S. Department of Labor established the Federal Bonding Program which covers ex-offenders for up to the first six months of their employment at no cost to their employer or the job applicant. In order to find our more about this program, vist the directory of Federal Bonding Contacts for your state.
Work Opportunity Tax Credit
The Work Opportunity Tax Credit (WOTC) is a Federal tax credit incentive that the Congress provides to private-sector businesses for hiring individuals from twelve target groups who have consistently faced significant barriers to employment. The main objective of this program is to enable the targeted employees to gradually move from economic dependency into self-sufficiency as they earn a steady income and become contributing taxpayers, while the participating employers are compensated by being able to reduce their federal income tax liability. WOTC joins other workforce programs that help incentivize workplace diversity and facilitate access to good jobs for American workers. - United States Department of Labor
Qualifications
Any individual who:
1. Has been convicted of a felony under any statute of the United States or any state.
2. Has a hire date which is not more than one year after the last date on which the individual was
convicted or was released from prison.
Employee Form - IRS Form 8850
Employer Form - WOTC Employment and Training Administration Form 9061
Employer's Tax Return Form - To be filed with Employer's Tax Return - IRS Form 5884
Links |
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| Following is a selection of links to important resources and organizations in the field of ex-offender reentry and related criminal justice areas. |
| Action Committee for Women in Prison The Action Committee for Women in Prison supports the humane and compassionate treatment of incarcerated women, while also working and sharing information with other organizations that seek reform in the criminal justice system, particularly as it pertains to women. ACWIP also helps secure the release of individual women who pose no threat to society. ACWIP educates the public on various criminal justice topics, and advocates for rehabilitation and restorative justice over punishment. View Link |
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| Aleph Institute The Spark of Light program is the only national program that serves Jewish people incarcerated in the United States to ensure that they stay connected to their families, communities and Jewish heritage. Spark of Light social programs and services provide for the religious, rehabilitation and humanitarian needs of individuals and their families from the moment of arrest, during the pre-sentencing stage and trial, and throughout their imprisonment. Spark of Light helps inmates amend their wrongs, seek forgiveness and have the best possible opportunity to return to society as purposeful, responsible people. View Link |
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| American Probation and Parole Association The American Probation and Parole Association is an international group made up of those involved in probation, parole and community-based corrections, for both adults and juveniles. View Link |
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| Artistic Talents, Inc, Artistic Talents Inc. (ATI) is a community Non-for-Profit 501 (c) (3) Organization dedicated in Transforming Young Lives Through The Arts. We offer a comprehensive list of counseling and support servcies aimed at healing youth and giving them skills to get ahead. View Link |
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| Books Not Bars Books Not Bars is a California campaign to close California's youth prisons and offer viable alternatives, such as regional rehabilitation centers and community-based programs. View Link |
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| Brennan Center for Justice The Brennan Center for Justice Program at NYU School of Law seeks reform in the justice system, as well ways to reduce the gap in justice, so that all are afforded the right to competent legal representation. View Link |
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| Bureau of Justice Statistics The Bureau of Justice Statistics collects, analyzes,publishes, and disseminates information on crime, criminal offenders, crime victims, and offers information on all levels of the justice system. View Link |
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| CAN-DO Clemency for All Non-violent Drug Offenders (CAN-DO) advocates for clemency for federal prisoners who were wrongly or unjustly convicted on drug charges. Many of the prisoners that CAN-DO is attempting to aid are mothers convicted on conspiracy charges. View Link |
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| Center for Community Alternatives The Center for Community Alternatives describes itself as a leader in community based alternatives to incarceration. Its mission is the promotion of reintegrative justice and the reduction in relying on incarceration. CCA achieves its mission through its services, advocating, and developing public policy that pursues human and civil rights. View Link |
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| Center for Public Integrity The Center for Public Integrity produces original investigative journalism concerning important public issues, and makes institutional power more transparent and accountable. View Link |
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| City Bar Justice Center The City Bar Justice Center increases access to justice by leveraging the resources of the New York City legal community. Drawing upon our relationship with the New York City Bar, the Justice Center provides legal assistance to those in need; mobilizes lawyers, law firms, corporate legal departments, and other legal institutions to provide pro bono legal services; educates the public on legal issues; fosters strategic relationships; and impacts public policy. View Link |
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| Connecticut Appleseed Connecticut Appleseed is a statewide, non-partisan 501(c)3 organization whose mission is to develop solutions for the causes, rather than the symptoms, of our state’s social problems. We help to make systemic changes in the delivery of services to enhance social and economic justice in our state by mobilizing the skills and resources of pro bono lawyers and other professionals. Our projects focus on improving access to education, healthcare and financial services for the state’s disadvantaged and underrepresented citizens. View Link |
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| Corrections.One.com Excellent resource sharing site for correctional officers. View Link |
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| Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency (CSOSA) of Washington, D.C. An excellent source of radio and television shows produced by CSOSA that are centered on criminal justice issues. The site also contains blogs. View Link |
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| Criminal Justice Legal Foundation Criminal Justice Legal Foundation is a non-profit organization that dedicates itself to restoring the balance between the rights of crime victims and the criminally accused. View Link |
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| Cure National Citizens United for Rehabilitation of Errants (CURE) started out as a grass root organization that went national in 1985. CURE believes that not everyone should be in prison, and that those who absolutely must should be given the needed resources to turn their lives around. View Link |
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| Delancey Street Foundation Founded in 1971, the Delancey Street Foundation aids the homeless, substance abusers, and the formerly incarcerated through housing, employment and programming. View Link |
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| Ex-Offender Nation Ex-Offender Nation is committed to bring to light the problem of overprosecution, oversentencing, overincarceration, and overcriminalization. We are a membership organization of people alarmed by the criminal justice system. Ex-Offender Nation is a movement to stop the "arrest of America." View Link |
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| Fair Shake Reentry Resource Center Fair Shake has developed and assembled references for all stakeholders. The Resource Directory is primarily focused on reintegration and support for former felons, but also contains valuable information for family members, correctional officers, employers, property managers, and community members to learn about and assist in their transition. View Link |
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| Families Against Mandatory Minimums FAMM advocates for fair sentencing laws, state and federal sentencing reform, and gives a voice to inmates and their families who were adversely affected by the mandatory minimum laws. FAMM also hosts SentenceSpeak, a blog that is a forum for educating the general public about sentencing injustices. View Link |
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| Family and Corrections Network FCN is a national resource center on children and families of the incarcerated. View Link |
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| Federal Cure Federal Cure advocates for federal inmates by addressing issues concerning fair sentencing, promoting alternatives to incarceration, supporting productive reentry programs, and is a driving force for reintroducing programs that offer rehabilitation in prisons. View Link |
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| Fortune Society The Fortune Society believes that those who are, or were, incarcerated can be productive members of society. Fortune Society supports successful reentry of ex offenders, and alternatives to incarceration, thereby strengthening communities. View Link |
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| Global Youth Justice Global Youth Justice proactively champions volunteer-driven strategies which alleviate some of the world's most pressing, complex, and costly social problems. We strive to improve the quality of life for humans through reducing high crime and historic-high incarceration rates of both youth and adults locally and globally. We initially achieve this through favorable outcomes that result from advancing the global expansion of quality local youth justice and juvenile justice voluntary diversion programs often called youth court, teen court, peer court, student court and youth peer panel. Volunteer youth serve as youth justice representatives in local juvenile justice systems on real crimes, offenses, and violations involving their peers. A record 1,264 plus communities around the globe now operate one of these adult and youth volunteer-driven approaches to reduce the incidence and prevent the escalation of of juvenile, and eventually - adult crime rates. View Link |
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| Harlem Community & Academic Partnership (HCAP) The Harlem Community & Academic Partnership (HCAP) is a diverse partnership of community residents, community-based organizations and service providers, academia, and public health institutions. HCAP is committed to identifying social determinants of health and implementing community-based interventions to improve the health and well-being of Harlem residents using a community-based participatory research approach. One of HCAP’s subcommittees is Policy Work Group (PWG), which examines policy barriers to successful community reintegration of formerly incarcerated individuals. View Link |
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| Jericho Reentry Program Jericho is a workforce development program that assists previously incarcerated men who have recently been released reestablish themselves in their communities. View Link |
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| Just Detention International Just Detention International is concerned about the safety and well-being of all detainees, including those held in adult prisons and jails, juvenile facilities, immigration detention centers, and police lock-ups, whether run by government agencies or by private corporations on behalf of the government. JDI has three core goals for its work: to ensure government accountability for prisoner rape; to transform ill-informed public attitudes about sexual violence in detention; and to promote access to resources for those who have survived this form of abuse. View Link |
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| Justice Policy Institute The Justice Policy Institute seeks ways to reduce incarceration and promotes social policies that are both effective and just. View Link |
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| LA Myers Consulting - Federal Prison Consultant LA Myers is a Federal Prison coach and consultant for women facing incarceration. View Link |
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| Life Skills Education Life Skills Education offers a new Series for Defendant/Offender Reentry Programs. View Link |
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| Maine Prisoner Advocacy Coalition The Maine Prisoner Advocacy Coalition (M-PAC) is comprised of Maine prisoners, their friends and families, victims of crime, and others committed to ethical, positive, and humane changes in Maine's prison system. View Link |
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| National H.I.R.E. Network (Helping Individuals with criminal records Re-enter through Employment) Established by the Legal Action Center, the National Helping Individuals with criminal records Re-enter through Employment Network is both a national clearinghouse for information and an advocate for policy change. The goal of the National H.I.R.E. Network is to increase the number and quality of job opportunities available to people with criminal records by changing public policies, employment practices and public opinion. The National H.I.R.E. Network also provides training and technical assistance to agencies working to improve the employment prospects for people with criminal records. View Link |
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| National Reentry Resource Center The Resource Center, established by the Second Chance Act, provides assistance to the prisoner reentry field. We provide education, training, and technical assistance to states, tribes, territories, local governments, service providers, nonprofit organizations, and corrections agencies working on prisoner reentry. View Link |
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| National Resource Center for Justice-Involved Women A resource for professionals, policymakers, and practitioners who work with adult women involved in the criminal justice system. View Link |
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| No New Prisons.org Ordinary citizens can actively oppose prison construction or prison expansion where they live. View Link |
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| Office of Justice Programs (Reentry) Provides resources and funding to develop, implement, enhance, and evaluate reentry strategies to ensure the safety of communities and reduction of serious, violent crime. View Link |
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| Open Society Institute The Open Society's Justice Initiative supports worldwide justice reform. OSI seeks ways to implement alternatives to pre-trial detention, provide more access to quality legal representation, and to bring together those working toward justice reform. View Link |
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| Our Place Our Place, DC (Our Place) is a unique non-profit organization in the District of Columbia (DC) dedicated to providing gender-specific direct services and advocacy to help formerly and currently incarcerated women come back home from prison. We operate with a mission to support women who are or have been in the criminal justice system by providing the resources they need to maintain connections with the community, resettle after incarceration, and reconcile with their families. Our Place helps women remain drug and alcohol free, obtain decent housing and jobs, gain access to education, secure resources for their children, and maintain physical and emotional health with a goal of helping women succeed in the community rather than engage in behaviors that result in re-arrest. View Link |
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| Prison Buddhist Correspondence Course The Buddhist Association of the United States,, at Chuang Yen Monastery offers a free, comprehensive course on Buddhism to prisoners. The course includes free books and materials. View Link |
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| Prison Fellowship Prison Fellowship Ministries is part of a larger cause—a bigger movement—to bring hope, healing and transformation to prisoners. Even more, the movement extends hope to their families, their little children and the communities which receive them back. View Link |
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| Prison Legal News Monthly newsletter published to help prisoners vindicate their human rights, both inside and outside of the government's judicial system. View Link |
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| Prisoner Reentry Institute at John Jay College The Prisoner Reentry Institute at John Jay College of Criminal Justice states that its mission spurs innovation and improves practice in the field of reentry through the advancement of knowledge; the translation of research into effective policy; the deliverance of service; and the encouragement of effective partnerships between criminal justice and non-criminal justice disciplines. View Link |
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| Reaching Out to Jewish Prisoners Reaching Out helps Jewish prisoners cope with the fears and anxieties prior to going to jail and the obstacles and hurdles while in prison. Prison can be a terrible experience. Being Jewish and in prison can be even harder. View Link |
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| Reentry Policy Council The Reentry Policy Council (RPC) was established in 2001 to assist state government officials grappling with the increasing number of people leaving prisons and jails to return to the communities they left behind. View Link |
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| ReentryNet/NY ReentryNet/NY is a web-based resource site on reentry from incarceration, for defenders,civil legal services, social services, and policy reform advocates. Developed by The Bronx Defenders and Pro Bono Net, the information on this site is geared toward those in New York, but many materials can be used by those outside of that area. View Link |
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| RELEASE: News related to Connecticut's formerly incarcerated citizens and the organizations that serve them. RELEASE is a publication devoted to collecting stories about citizens with criminal histories and the organizations that serve them. Produced by the Institute for Municipal and Regional Policy (IMRP) and created by students from Central Connecticut State University, the newsletter provides profiles, general features, interviews, videos, informative graphs and more. Our goal: to empower ex-offenders and to educate the larger Connecticut community on what it can do to stem recidivism. Release covers employment, housing, education, children of incarcerated parents and other subject areas that relate to building a productive life with a criminal history. View Link |
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| Safe Streets Arts Foundation The Safe Streets Arts Foundation uses the arts to allow all segments of the criminal justice community to communicate with each other and with the public. We are especially committed to helping the 2 ½ million men and women in prison, 95% of whom will someday return to society as our neighbors. They receive our support in prison to use the arts to develop their self esteem and a positive attitude vital for successful reentry. View Link |
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| Safer Foundation For over thirty years The Safer Foundation has been reducing recidivism by helping the formerly incarcerated find employment, and through their many social service programs. View Link |
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| Solitary Watch Solitary Watch is a public website aimed at bringing the widespread use of solitary confinement and other forms of torture in U.S. prisons out of the shadows and into the light of the public square. Solitary Watch’s mission is to provide the public—as well as practicing attorneys, legal scholars, law enforcement and corrections officers, policymakers, educators, advocates, and prisoners—with the first centralized source of background research, unfolding news, and original reporting on solitary confinement in the United States. View Link |
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| The Innocence Project The Innocence Project is a national litigation and public policy organization dedicated to exonerating wrongfully convicted people through DNA testing and reforming the criminal justice system to prevent future injustice. View Link |
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| The November Coalition Working to end drug war injustice, the November Coalition, a non-profit grassroots organization, was founded in 1997. Members educate the public about destructive, unnecessary incarceration due to the U.S. drug war, and advocate for drug war prisoners View Link |
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| The Sentencing Project The Sentencing Project is a national organization that works toward a fair and effective criminal justice system, and alternatives to incarceration. View Link |
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| The Sixth Amendment Center The Sixth Amendment Center seeks to ensure that no person faces potential time in jail without first having the aid of a lawyer with the time, ability and resources to present an effective defense, as required under the United States Constitution. We do so by measuring public defense systems against established standards of justice. When shortcomings are identified, we help states and counties make their courts fair again in ways that promote public safety and fiscal responsibility. View Link |
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| The Vera Institute of Justice The Vera Institute of Justice combines expertise in research, demonstration projects, and technical assistance to help leaders in government and civil society improve the systems people rely on for justice and safety. Vera is an independent, non-partisan, nonprofit center for justice policy and practice. View Link |
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| Think Outside The Cell Foundation The Think Outside the Cell Foundation works to end the stigma and to help the incarcerated, the formerly incarcerated and their loved ones through literacy, education, personal development and the removal of societal barriers to the American Dream. View Link |
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| Thousand Kites Thousand Kites is a community-based performance, web, video and radio project centered on the United States prison system. View Link |
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| University Legal Services [ULS] ULS protects and advances the rights of people with disabilities through a range of interventions including direct advocacy, education, monitoring, policy reform and litigation. The ULS JPAP team represents DC residents with psychiatric disabilities to prevent unnecessary periods of incarceration and reduce barriers to their successful reentry to the community. Our advocacy extends into local and federal correctional facilities,adjudication proceedings and other criminal justice, and mental health systems. View Link |
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| Urban Institute The Urban Institute gathers data, conducts research, evaluates programs, offers technical assistance overseas, and educates Americans on social and economical issues. View Link |
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| Women's Prison Association Women's Prison Association has programs that help women to find jobs, housing, and medical care, and also helps to reunite them with their families. Via the Institute on Women and Criminal Justice, WPA seeks to advocate for women, and to investigate, through research, ways and programs that will benefit female prisoners and ex offenders. View Link |
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Grants |
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Following is a selection of available funding. Certain eligibility requirements may apply. If you know of any grants which deserve to be listed in our grant directory, please email us with your suggestion, and we will evaluate it for inclusion. A subscription to Reentry Central is required to view Grant Details. |
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| Bureau of Justice Assistance Releases Two-Phase Second Chance Act Adult Reentry Demonstration Program Grant Solicitation |
| Deadline Date: 06-20-2013 |
| Reentry Program for Juveniles with Co-Occurring Substance Abuse and Mental Health Disorders Solicitation |
| Deadline Date: 06-24-2013 |
| Criminal Justice Improvement and Recidivism Reduction |
| Deadline Date: 06-27-2013 |
| Second Chance Act Comprehensive Statewide Adult Recidivism Reduction Planning Program Grant Solicitation |
| Deadline Date: 06-28-2013 |
| Training, Technical Assistance, and Implementation Support for Information Sharing |
| Deadline Date: 07-09-2013 |
| The Kinder Morgan Foundation Grant |
| Deadline Date: 07-10-2013 |
| FY 2013 Division of Innovation and Research Fellowship Program on Juvenile Justice Data |
| Deadline Date: 07-15-2013 |
| Research on the Impact of Oil Industry in the Dakotas and Montana on Domestic Violence, Dating Violence, Sexual Assault, and Stalking. |
| Deadline Date: 08-05-2013 |
Contact |
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| Reentry Central Box 411 New Haven, CT 06513 Phone: 203.468.6589 Fax: 203.304.8079 Email: info@reentrycentral.org |
Dr. Sandra Martin
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Beatrice Codianni
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Reentry Central is a service of One Million Americans, Ltd., a national organization dedicated to criminal justice reform. Please visit our website at onemillionamericans.org. One Million Americans, Ltd., Box 411, New Haven, CT, 06513 |
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EVENTS |
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| Following is a list of upcoming events related to the field of ex-offender reentry and related criminal justice topics. |
| Film: The 5K Motion |
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| Date of Event: | 06-20-2013 |
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| Time of Event: | 6:30 p.m. |
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| Event Location: | Bridgeport, CT |
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| The 5K motion is a short film that shows the reality of what can happen when someone is convicted of illegal gun possession. The film focuses on how women and girls are often caught up in illegal activities due to their assocaition with gang members, and depicts the collateral consequences that follow.
Contact information:
Denise Holley DEmpowerment@aol.com and Kelly Stuper kstuper@thereachfoundation.org/860 674-1261 |
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| Link to Event: | Click here for more details. |
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| Mujahid Farid Soros Justice Fellowship Reception |
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| Date of Event: | 06-20-2013 |
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| Time of Event: | 6:00 P.M. |
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| Event Location: | Correctional Association of New York, 2090 Adam Clayton Powell Blvd, Suite 200, Ny, NY 10027 |
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| On June 20, the Correctional Association of New York will hold a reception to celebrate CA staff member Mujahid Farid’s selection as a 2013 Soros Justice Fellow.
Mr. Farid was among 14 established and emerging leaders working to reform the criminal justice system selected by the Open Society Foundations to receive the fellowship.
The CA is proud to be serving as Farid’s host organization for the fellowship, and is pleased to invite friends and colleagues to celebrate and learn about Farid’s planned work, which will focus on expanding release opportunities for the rapidly growing elderly population in prison.
There is no cost to attend, but RSVP is required. |
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| Link to Event: | Click here for more details. |
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| Justice Involved Women Conference |
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| Date of Event: | 06-21-2013 |
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| Time of Event: | 8:00 a.m. |
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| Event Location: | Staybridge Hotel, 1000 Genesee Street, Rochester, NY 14611 |
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| 8:00 - 4:00
The Anthony Center for Women’s Leadership at the University of Rochester is hosting a conference where researchers, practitioners and policy makers will present their work to disseminate evidence-based practices and interventions for justice involved women. Other discussion topics will include the state of the science, difficulties for informing practice, funding challenges and solutions for justice involved women. |
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| Link to Event: | Click here for more details. |
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| America Honors Recovery |
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| Date of Event: | 06-26-2013 |
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| Time of Event: | 6:00 P.M. |
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| Event Location: | Carnegie Institution for Science, 1530 P Street NW, Washington, DC 20005 |
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| 6:00 - 8:00 P.M.
Faces & Voices of Recovery will honor leaders in the addiction recovery movement, highlighting the extraordinary contributions of the country's most influential recovery community leaders and organizations at America Honors Recovery. The event, sponsored with Caron Treatment Centers, honors the exceptional energy, commitment, dedication and creativity of these individuals and organizations in advocating for the rights of people and their families in or seeking recovery from addiction to alcohol and other drugs.
Agenda:
About the Presenter(s):
America Honors Recovery will salute 2013's most influential recovery community leaders and organizations as well as the legacies of Joel Hernandez, Vernon Johnson and Lisa Mojer-Torres during an evening reception on June 26, 2013 in Washington, DC. We hope you'll join us.
Cost:
$100 |
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| Link to Event: | Click here for more details. |
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| Webinar: Three New Focus Areas added to the What Works in Reentry Clearinghouse |
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| Date of Event: | 06-27-2013 |
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| Time of Event: | 3:00 P.M. |
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| Event Location: | ||
| National Reentry Resource Center
The Council of State Governments Justice Center (CSG Justice Center), the Urban Institute, and the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) are excited to announce the expansion of three new focus areas on the What Works in Reentry Clearinghouse (Clearinghouse) website—Substance Abuse, Education, and Family programs.
To assist users in navigating the complexity of reentry research, as well as get acquainted with the new sections, the Urban Institute and the CSG Justice Center will conduct a training webinar.
The additions are the result of recent research review conducted by the Urban Institute in partnership with the CSG Justice Center and can be used by funders, policymakers, program administrators, and practitioners to effectively invest resources to improve public safety, public health, and individual outcomes for people reentering from incarceration. Highlights include:
• Therapeutic Communities, which were generally found to be effective at reducing recidivism and substance abuse, are most effective when they are gender-responsive;
• Some education programs were able to reduce recidivism, however, because some programs did not, more research is needed on how education programs can impact recidivism; and
• Policies that promote visitation by friends and family members can contribute to reductions in recidivism |
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| Link to Event: | Click here for more details. |
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| 2013 NIATx Summit/SAAS National Conference |
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| Date of Event: | 07-14-2013 |
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| Event Location: | San Diego Marriott Marquis & Marina, 333 West Harbor Dr, San Diego, CA 92101 |
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| 7/14/2013 - 7/16/2013
Description:
The conference is focused on the business model of addiction and mental health services. It is designed for behavioral health CEOs and senior managers who are tackling major changes at their organization and preparing for new opportunities. |
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| Link to Event: | Click here for more details. |
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| Applications Now Being Accepted for New Youth in Custody Certificate Program |
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| Date of Event: | 08-19-2013 |
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| Event Location: | Georgetown University, Washington, DC |
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| Agust 19 - 23, 2013
Applications are due by 11:59 p.m. (in the applicant's local time zone) on April 23, 2013.
The Council of State Governments Justice Center (CSG Justice Center) and the Center for Juvenile Justice Reform (CJJR) at Georgetown University’s Public Policy Institute are pleased to announce the opening of the application period for CJJR’s inaugural Youth in Custody Certificate Program. CJJR is partnering with the CSG Justice Center, the Missouri Department of Social Services' Division of Youth Services, and the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention's National Center for Youth in Custody to offer this professional development opportunity, which is designed to help juvenile justice system leaders improve outcomes for youth in custody. |
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| Link to Event: | Click here for more details. |
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| Youth in Custody Certificate Program |
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| Date of Event: | 08-19-2013 |
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| Event Location: | Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. |
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| August 19 - 23, 2013
The Council of State Governments Justice Center (CSG Justice Center) and the Center for Juvenile Justice Reform (CJJR) at Georgetown University’s Public Policy Institute have extended the application period for CJJR’s inaugural Youth in Custody Certificate Program. CJJR is partnering with the CSG Justice Center, the Missouri Department of Social Services' Division of Youth Services, and the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention's National Center for Youth in Custody to offer this professional development opportunity, which is designed to help juvenile justice system leaders improve outcomes for youth in custody.
The Youth in Custody Certificate Program will be held from Monday, August 19, to Friday, August 23, 2013, at Georgetown University in Washington, DC. Applications were originally due by April 23, 2013; however, the deadline has been extended. The new deadline for applications is 11:59 p.m. (in the applicant's local time zone) on Friday, May 17, 2013. |
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| Link to Event: | Click here for more details. |
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| Travis County to Host Vision Summit: Looking Toward the Future of Reentry in Austin, Texas |
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| Date of Event: | 09-10-2013 |
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| Event Location: | Holiday Inn, Austin Midtown, Austin, TX |
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| September 10 - 13, 2013
Through enhanced communication, coordination, and collaboration among stakeholders, communities can be made safer, recidivism can be reduced, reentry outcomes can be improved, and individuals returning from jail and prison can be better served. At this event TCSO will host approximately 300 attendees from across the country, feature presenters who are leaders in the field of reentry and offer attendees new approaches to strengthen reentry efforts and improve outcomes in their respective communities. TCSO is currently accepting proposals for workshop presenters and speakers. |
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| Link to Event: | Click here for more details. |
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| National Symposium on Juvenile Services |
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| Date of Event: | 10-20-2013 |
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| Event Location: | Galt House Hotel and Suites, Louisville, Kentucky |
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| 10/20/2013 - 10/24/2013
In 2013, the Symposium will be a collaboration between the host organization (National Partnership for Juvenile Services), the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), the National Center for Youth in Custody (NC4YC), the Coalition for Juvenile Justice (CJJ), the KY Juvenile Justice Advisory Board, the KY Department for Juvenile Justice, the KY Administrative Office of the Courts, and the KY Educational Collaborative for State Agency Children (KECSAC).
Cost: $175-$245 |
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| Link to Event: | Click here for more details. |
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| International Drug Policy Reform Conference |
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| Date of Event: | 10-23-2013 |
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| Event Location: | Denver, CO |
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| October 23 - 26, 2013
Attendees will have the opportunity to spend three days interacting with people working for alternatives to the war on drugs while participating in sessions featuring leading experts from around the world. |
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| Link to Event: | Click here for more details. |
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| Fortune Society Marathon Team: ING NYC Marathon |
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| Date of Event: | 11-03-2013 |
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| Event Location: | New York,NY |
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| On Sunday,November 3, 2013, the team will represent Fortune in the ING New York City Marathon,raising awareness and funds for our work. Members of the marathon team will receive guaranteed entry into the 2013 ING NYC Marathon in exchange for a commitment to pledge to raise $3,250 to support Fortune’s mission of supporting successful reentry from prison and promoting alternatives to incarceration, thus strengthening the fabric of our communities.
For more information, please contact Indrani Nicodemus at inicodemus@fortunesociety.org or 212.691.7554. |
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| Link to Event: | Click here for more details. |
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| Global Youth Justice 8th International Training Institute |
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| Date of Event: | 12-03-2013 |
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| Event Location: | Fremont Hotel and Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada |
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| December 3 - 5, 2013
Registration Open -- Global Youth Justice’s 8th Training Institute
Establish, Enhance, or Expand Teen Court/Youth Court/Peer Court
December 3–5, 2013, Las Vegas, NV, USA
Global Youth Justice will convene its 8th International Training Institute for local communities to Establish, Enhance or Expand a Teen Court/Youth Court/Peer Court juvenile justice diversion program. Global Youth Justice’s 8th Training Institute takes place this December 3-5, 2013 in Las Vegas, NV, USA. This 8th International Training Institute will include 24-hours of instruction to include training sessions on identifying appropriate juvenile offender referrals, training youth and adult volunteers, planning balanced and restorative justice mandated peer-imposed community sanctions, graduated sanctions, implementing operational and administrative procedures, identifying juvenile justice resources, grant writing and Juvenile Justice/School/Community-Based |
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| Link to Event: | Click here for more details. |
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