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Crime and Justice

open prison doorTougher criminal sanctions have driven up the jail and prison population for more than 25 years. After sentencing reform in the early 1980s, a flood of inmates overcrowded prisons and jails and strained state budgets. About half a million people were incarcerated in 1980, 2.3 million by 2007.

Our justice policy researchers inform and guide strategies to reduce recidivism by helping ex-offenders reenter society productively. Related research examines crime trends, assesses investigation techniques, and evaluates crime prevention programs and strategies. Read more.

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From the Classroom to the Community: Exploring the Role of Education during Incarceration and Reentry (Research Report)
Diana Brazzell, Anna Crayton, Debbie Mukamal, Amy L. Solomon, Nicole Lindahl

This report synthesizes the Education Reentry Roundtable. It surveys the current landscape of correctional education, discussing both the educational needs of people involved in the criminal justice system and the programs being provided to meet those needs; reviews research on the effectiveness of correctional education and guiding principles for effective programming; discusses the issues involved in providing education in correctional settings and identifies some potential responses to these challenges. The report closes by looking to the future and highlighting key issues and new directions in research, policy, and practice. More information about the Reentry Roundtables can be found at http://www.urban.org/projects/reentry-roundtable/index.cfm.

Posted to Web: September 23, 2009Publication Date: July 31, 2009

The Local Role of the United States Parole Commission (USPC): Increasing Public Safety, Reducing Recidivism, and Using Alternatives to Re-incarceration in the District of Columbia (Testimony)
Jesse Jannetta

Testimony delivered to the House of Representatives Oversight and Government Reform Subcommittee on Federal Workforce, Postal Service, and the District of Columbia, hearing on "The Local Role of the United States Parole Commission (USPC): Increasing Public Safety, Reducing Recidivism, and Using Alternatives to Re-incarceration in the District of Columbia." The testimony summarizes work by UI synthesizing extant research and expert consensus regarding what constitutes effective parole supervision to reduce recidivism. Changes currently underway in the parole field and factors to consider in implementing the practices discussed are also presented.

Posted to Web: September 22, 2009Publication Date: September 22, 2009

Nancy La Vigne to Head the Urban Institute's Justice Policy Center (Press Release)
The Urban Institute

Nancy La Vigne, an expert on crime prevention and prisoner reentry and the founding director of the U.S. Department of Justice’s Mapping and Analysis for Public Safety program, will become the director of the Urban Institute’s Justice Policy Center on October 1.

Posted to Web: September 15, 2009Publication Date: September 15, 2009

The Effects of Postsecondary Correctional Education: Final Report (Research Report)
Laura Winterfield, Mark Coggeshall, Michelle Burke-Storer, Vanessa Correa, Simon Tidd

Increasing educational proficiency has shown promise as one strategy for assisting inmates in finding gainful employment after release and ending their involvement with the criminal justice system. This report examines the effect of prison-based postsecondary education (PSE) on offenders both while incarcerated and after release. In three states, prisoners who participated in PSE were less likely to recidivate during the first year after release.

Posted to Web: September 03, 2009Publication Date: April 01, 2009

Foster Youth Fall Through the Cracks Between the Child Welfare and Juvenile Justice Systems (Press Release)
The Urban Institute

Timothy Ross identifies the obstacles frustrating service coordination and details ways to strengthen the fragile web connecting the many systems involved in protecting foster youth. Child welfare agencies often have responsibility for a child when a family crisis arises, but not the authority or capacity to resolve it without cooperation from other government divisions. When complex systems and bureaucracies have overlapping jurisdiction, fine-tuned coordination is the exception and not the rule.

Posted to Web: August 13, 2009Publication Date: August 13, 2009

Experiences of Exprisoners in Houston Analyzed in New Reports (Press Release)
The Urban Institute

"One in five of the 70,000 men and women released annually from Texas's state prisons return to metropolitan Houston. Four new reports from the Urban Institute analyze their experiences from the perspective of their families, their communities, and the former prisoners themselves.

Posted to Web: June 24, 2009Publication Date: June 22, 2009

One Year Out: The Experiences of Male Returning Prisoners in Houston, Texas (Research Report)
Nancy G. La Vigne, Tracey L. Shollenberger, Sara Debus

Of the 61,000 men released from Texas prisons, roughly 13,000 call Houston their home. These men face challenges across a wide array of skill deficits and needs. In an effort to understand the factors contributing to successful reentry and inform policies to ensure a safer return for both prisoners and the communities in which they reside, the Urban Institute conducted a study of 210 men exiting Texas prisons and returning to the Houston area. This report presents findings from three waves of interviews with these men, conducted shortly before and at two points after their release.

Posted to Web: June 22, 2009Publication Date: May 14, 2009

Prisoner Reentry in Houston: Community Perspectives (Research Report)
Diana Brazzell, Nancy G. La Vigne

In Houston, Texas, returning prisoners face many challenges, from securing housing and employment to rebuilding relationships with their families and support networks, while at the same time attempting to avoid old pathways to criminal behavior and substance abuse. The impact of prisoner reentry, however, extends far beyond these individuals and their families and friends. The communities to which former prisoners return and the local government and social service networks that serve these communities have a significant stake in the successful reintegration of returning prisoners. This research brief explores prisoner reentry from the perspective of Houston stakeholders and community members.

Posted to Web: June 11, 2009Publication Date: May 14, 2009

Women on the Outside: Understanding the Experiences of Female Prisoners Returning to Houston, Texas (Research Report)
Nancy G. La Vigne, Lisa E. Brooks, Tracey L. Shollenberger

This research report explores the unique experiences of women exiting prison, focusing on a representative sample of 142 women who were released from Texas prisons and state jails in 2005 and returned to Houston communities. It describes the challenges women face in obtaining housing, reuniting with family, and avoiding drug use and criminal behavior after their return to the community. Recommendations for improvements in policies and practices specific to increasing the successful reintegration of women are also presented.

Posted to Web: June 11, 2009Publication Date: May 14, 2009

When Relatives Return: Interviews with Family Members of Returning Prisoners in Houston, Texas (Research Report)
Tracey L. Shollenberger

This research brief examines the challenges of incarceration and reentry from the perspective of family members in Houston, Texas. Prior research documents that returning prisoners expect and receive high levels of support from family after release, and that those who have access to family support fare better than those who do not on a range of reentry outcomes. Given the potential value of involving family in reentry planning, this report offers useful information about the family members who are closest to returning prisoners and the challenges they face in supporting their relatives.

Posted to Web: June 11, 2009Publication Date: May 14, 2009

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