Prison population
Crime File: Prison Crowding
The Racial Effects of Prison Reform
Examining Prison Stays in Michigan
Examination of Justice Reinvestment and Its Impact on Two States - Panel at the 2010 NIJ Conference
Looking Back To See the Future of Prison Downsizing in America - Keynote Address at the 2012 NIJ Conference
Study Raises Questions About Psychological Effects of Solitary Confinement
A Different Method of Predicting Risk: Unpacking the Potential of a Statewide Sentencing Risk Assessment
Guilty Plea and Latino Initiatives
Californias "Realignment": Understanding Local Legal Compliance in A Potential Era of Prison Downsizing
Bridging the Research/Practice Gap: Street-Level Decision Making and Historical Influences Related to Evidence-Based Practices in Adult Probation
Prison-Based Treatment Assessment (PTA): Final Activity Report
Effect of Prison-Based Alcohol Treatment: A Multi-Site Process and Outcome Evaluation
Parole Violations and Revocations — Evidence-Based Responses to California in Crisis
Executive Session on Community Corrections
Study of the Use of Residential Substance Abuse Treatment for State Prisoners Program Funds on Aftercare Services
Community Corrections: An Executive Session on the Future of Correctional Policy
Looking Back to See the Future of Prison Downsizing in America
NIJ Conference Keynote Address
The recent declines in U.S. prison populations have caused many reformers to suggest that America's experiment with mass incarceration is ending. But current prison downsizing policies may well backfire if we fail to heed the lessons learned from the intermediate sanctions movement of the 1990s. In the event attendees rated highest, Dr. Petersilia summarizes these lessons and discussed why we must consider them if we want to reverse — for good — four decades of prison expansion.
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