Deficits in education, employment, and housing as well as the lack of treatment programs pose significant barriers to the successful reentry of inmates released from prison. This research uses a representative sample of inmates released from Ohio prisons to examine the extent to which these factors are associated with recidivism. Furthermore, building on prior research, it examines potential differences in these predictors by gender. The findings provide support for Petersilia's suggestions and indicate that employment, housing, and the completion of some forms of treatment are negatively associated with multiple measures of recidivism. Also, no gender differences in the predictors examined here are detected, suggesting that the factors likely behave in a gender-neutral manner. (Published Abstract)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- People, Places, and Things: How Female Ex-Prisoners Negotiate Their Neighborhood Context
- Extent, Trends, and Perpetrators of Prostitution-Related Homicide in the United States
- Insights into turning points from the perspective of young people with out-of-home care experience: events, impact and facilitators of change