Prisons
Using General Strain Theory To Explore the Effects of Prison Victimization Experiences on Later Offending and Substance Use
Assessing the Link Between Exposure to a Violent Prison Context and Inmate Maladjustment
Maryland Uses Managed Approach to Making Cellphone Service in Prisons "Disappear"
Horse Farm Detention Center
Sociopolitical Context of Prison Violence and Its Control: A Case Study of Supermax and Its Effect in Illinois
Impact of Prison Reentry Services on Short-Term Outcomes: Evidence From a Multisite Evaluation
Individual-Level Predictors of Community Aftercare Completion
Assessing the Need for Gender-Specific Explanations of Prisoner Victimization
Conducting Randomized Controlled Trials in State Prisons
Notes from the Field: Prison Reform Reducing Restrictive Housing for Improved Prison Outcomes
Individual and Environmental Influences on Prison Officer Safety
Incarceration and Desistance: Evidence from a Natural Policy Experiment
State Responses to Mass Incarceration
Researchers have devoted considerable attention to mass incarceration, specifically its magnitude, costs, and collateral consequences. In the face of economic constraints, strategies to reduce correctional populations while maintaining public safety are becoming a fiscal necessity. This panel will present strategies that states have undertaken to reduce incarceration rates while balancing taxpayer costs with ensuring public safety.
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Consequences of a Prison Record for Employment: How Do Race, Ethnicity & Gender Factor In?
Getting Ready Program - Remaking Prison Life to Prepare Inmates for Reentry - Interview at the National Institute of Justice
Harnessing the Power of Technology in Institutional Corrections
Solutions in Corrections: Using Evidence-based Knowledge
Professor Ed Latessa describes how his team and he assessed more than 550 programs and saw the best and the worst. Professor Latessa shared his lessons learned and examples of states that are trying to use evidence-based knowledge to improve correctional programs.
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Less Prison, More Police, Less Crime: How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy
Professor Lawrence Sherman explains how policing can prevent far more crimes than prison per dollar spent. His analysis of the cost-effectiveness of prison compared to policing suggests that states can cut their total budgets for justice and reduce crime by reallocating their spending on crime: less prison, more police.
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Going Home (or Not): How Residential Change Might Help the Formerly Incarcerated Stay Out of Prison
Dr. Kirk discusses how Hurricane Katrina affected those formerly incarcerated persons originally from New Orleans and their likelihood of returning to prison. Kirk also discussed potential strategies for fostering residential change among those who were incarcerated, focusing specifically on parole residency policies and the provision of public housing vouchers.
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Changing the Behavior of Drug-Involved Offenders: Supervision That Works
A small number of those who commit crimes are heavily involved in drugs commit a large portion of the crime in this country. An evaluation of a "smart supervision" effort in Hawaii that uses swift and certain sanctioning showed that individuals committing crimes who are heavily involved in drug use can indeed change their behavior when the supervision is properly implemented.
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Benefit-Cost Analysis for Crime Policy
How do we decide how to allocate criminal justice resources in a way that minimizes the social harms from both crime and policy efforts to control crime? How, for that matter, do we decide how much to spend on the criminal justice system and crime control generally, versus other pressing needs? These questions are at the heart of benefit-cost analysis.
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