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Parole, Desistance from Crime, and Community
Integration
Committee on Community Supervision and Desistance
from Crime, National Research Council
ISBN: 0-309-11080-7, 124 pages, 6 x 9, (2007)
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PREPUBLICATION
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Parole, Desistance from Crime, and Community Integration

Committee on Community Supervision and Desistance from Crime
Committee on Law and Justice
Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education

PLEASE CITE AS A REPORT OF THE NATIONAL RESEARCH
COUNCIL OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES

ADVANCE COPY
NOT FOR PUBLIC RELEASE BEFORE

Tuesday, July 24, 2007
4:00 p.m. EDT

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THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES PRESS

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NOTICE: The project that is the subject of this report was approved by the Governing Board of
the National Research Council, whose members are drawn from the councils of the National
Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine. The
members of the committee responsible for the report were chosen for their special competences
and with regard for appropriate balance.
This study was supported by a contract between the National Academy of Sciences and the
National Institute of Justice. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed
in this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the
organizations or agencies that provided support for the project.
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Copyright 2007 by the National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Suggested citation: National Research Council. (2007). Parole, Desistance from Crime, and
Community Integration. Committee on Community Supervision and Desistance from Crime,
Committee on Law and Justice, Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education.
Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.

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The National Academy of Sciences is a private, nonprofit, self-perpetuating society of
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COMMITTEE ON COMMUNITY SUPERVISION
AND DESISTANCE FROM CRIME

JOAN PETERSILIA (Cochair), School of Social Ecology, University of California,
Irvine
RICHARD ROSENFELD (Cochair), Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice,
University of Missouri, St. Louis
RICHARD J. BONNIE, University of Virginia School of Law
ROBERT D. CRUTCHFIELD, Department of Sociology, University of Washington
MARK A.R. KLEIMAN, Department of Public Policy, University of California, Los
Angeles
JOHN H. LAUB, Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, University of
Maryland
CHRISTY A. VISHER, Justice Policy Center, The Urban Institute, Washington, DC
CAROL PETRIE, Study Director
EUGENIA GROHMAN, Senior Project Officer
LINDA DEPUGH, Administrative Assistant

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CONTENTS
Preface
Executive Summary
1

Introduction and Background

2

Dimensions of Desistance

3

Parole: Current Practice

4

Services and Programs for Releasees

5

Criminal Justice Institutions and Community Resources

6

Conclusions, Recommendation, and Research Agenda

References
Appendixes
A

Workshop Agenda

B

Biographical Sketches of Committee Members and Staff

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PREFACE
Because the United States has the highest rate of imprisonment in the
industrialized world, it also has the highest number of offenders—more than 600,000—
returning to their communities, mostly cities, every year. Unfortunately, more than onehalf of all released offenders will return to prison within 3 years of their release. The
proportion of released offenders who return to prison has changed very little over the past
three decades. It is in broad public interest to provide services and treatment in prison and
as part of community supervision that will reduce the rate of recidivism—the return to
prison for parole violations or the commission of new crimes. Reductions in recidivism
would simultaneously reduce state corrections costs and improve community safety.
In this volume we attempt to pull together what is known from research about
various models of community supervision designed to reduce recidivism and promote
desistance from crime. We identify gaps in the research literature, and we discuss how
currently available resources might best be used to improve community supervision
outcomes.
This report is based in part on a workshop held by the Committee on Community
Supervision and Desistance from Crime in January 2006. Four leading scholars
presented papers to stimulate and guide the committee’s discussion of traditional and new
models of community supervision. The committee owes much to their work: David
Farabee of the University of California Los Angeles; Faye S. Taxman of Virginia
Commonwealth University; David B. Wexler, University of Arizona and University of
Puerto Rico; and Pamela K. Lattimore, University of South Carolina and Research
Triangle Institute.
The committee’s work was also aided by the workshop discussants, who
represented a distinguished group from the research and practice communities: Michael
Jacobson, Vera Institute in New York City; Martin Horn, commissioner, New York City
Department of Corrections; Tom LeBel, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee; Sharon
Neumann, assistant deputy director, Community Sentencing Division, Oklahoma
Department of Corrections; Jennifer L. Skeem, University of California, Irvine;
Honorable Cindy Lederman, administrative judge, Eleventh Judicial Circuit, Juvenile
Division, Miami-Dade County, Florida; Peggy B. Burke, Center for Effective Public
Policy, Silver Spring, Maryland; and Jeremy Travis, president, John Jay college of
Criminal Justice, New York City. The committee is grateful to all of these wonderful
scholars and practitioners whose papers and comments provided such a sound foundation
for this report.
The committee also offers grateful thanks to Glenn R. Schmitt, acting director of
the National Institute of Justice (NIJ) at the time the workshop was held. He not only
facilitated funding for the committee’s work, but also gave unstintingly of his time and
shared his ideas with the committee and workshop participants. The committee also
thanks Thomas Feucht, assistant director for research and evaluation at NIJ for his
invaluable support for this project, and Patrick Clark, acting director of the evaluation
division at NIJ, who first broached the idea of focusing on desistance and the ways in
which community supervision could foster less or zero offending among those released
from prison.

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The successful reintegration of former prisoners is one of the most formidable
challenges facing society today. We hope that this volume will be of practical use to both
the research and corrections communities in helping released offenders to desist from
crime and become fully integrated and law-abiding citizens. This report has been
reviewed in draft form by individuals chosen for their diverse perspectives and technical
expertise, in accordance with procedures approved by the National Research Council’s
Report Review Committee. The purpose of this independent review is to provide candid
and critical comments that will assist the institution in making its published report as
sound as possible and to ensure that the report meets institutional standards for
objectivity, evidence, and responsiveness to the study charge. The review comments and
draft manuscript remain confidential to protect the integrity of the deliberative process.
We thank the following individuals for their review of this report: Shawn
Bushway, Program on the Economics of Crime and Justice Policy, School of Criminal
Justice, University at Albany, State University of New York; Michael E. Ezell,
Department of Sociology, Vanderbilt University; Julie Horney, Office of the Dean,
School of Criminal Justice, University at Albany, State University of New York; Lila
Kazemian, Department of Sociology, John Jay College of Criminal Justice/City
University of New York; Michael D. Maltz, Criminal Justice and Information and
Decision Sciences (emeritus), University of Illinois at Chicago; Ray Paternoster,
Department of Criminology, University of Maryland, College Park; Alex R. Piquero,
John Jay College of Criminal Justice/City University of New York; Steven Raphael,
Richard and Rhoda Goldman School of Public Policy, University of California, Berkeley;
and Amy L. Solomon, The Urban Institute, Washington, DC.
Although the reviewers listed above have provided many constructive comments
and suggestions, they were not asked to endorse the conclusions or recommendations, nor
did they see the final draft of the report before its release. The review of this report was
overseen by Alfred Blumstein, The H. John Heinz III School of Public Policy and
Management, Carnegie Mellon University. Appointed by the National Research Council,
he was responsible for making certain that an independent examination of this report was
carried out in accordance with institutional procedures and that all review comments were
carefully considered. Responsibility for the final content of this report rests entirely with
the authoring committee and the institution.
Joan Petersilia and Richard Rosenfeld
Cochairs, Committee on Community
Supervision and Desistance from Crime

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Executive Summary
Every day, about 1,600 people are released from prisons in the United States. Of
these 600,000 new releasees every year, about 480,000 are subject to parole or some
other kind of postrelease supervision.
Prison releasees represent a challenge, both to themselves and to the communities
to which they return. Will the releasees see parole as an opportunity to be reintegrated
into society, with jobs and homes and supportive families and friends? Or will they
commit new crimes or violate the terms of their parole contracts? If so, will they be
returned to prison or placed under more stringent community supervision? Will the
communities to which they return see them as people to be reintegrated or people to be
avoided? And the institution of parole itself is challenged, with three different functions:
to facilitate reintegration for parolees who are ready for rehabilitation; to deter crime; and
to apprehend those parolees who commit new crimes and return them to prison.
In recent decades, policy makers, researchers, and program administrators have
focused almost exclusively on “recidivism,” which is essentially the failure of releasees
to refrain from crime or stay out of prison. In contrast, for this study the National
Institute of Justice (NIJ) of the U.S. Department of Justice asked the National Research
Council to focus on “desistance,” which broadly covers continued absence of criminal
activity and requires reintegration into society. Specifically, the committee was asked (1)
to consider the current state of parole practices, new and emerging models of community
supervision, and what is necessary for successful reentry and (2) to provide a research
agenda on the effects of community supervision on desistance from criminal activity,
adherence to conditions of parole, and successful reentry into the community. To carry
out its charge, the committee organized and held a workshop focused on traditional and
new models of community supervision, the empirical underpinnings of such models, and
the infrastructure necessary to support successful reentry. The committee also reviewed
the literature on desistance from crime, community supervision, and the evaluation
research on selected types of intervention.
FINDINGS
Parolees are a heterogeneous group, and their rates of desistance from crime vary
widely: that is, there is no average parolee. Parolees who have short criminal records or
have committed violent offenses have lower rates of recidivism than parolees who have
long criminal records or have committed drug or property crimes. Releasees who have
just served their first prison sentence have sharply lower rates of recidivism than those
who have been imprisoned more than once, regardless of the sex, age, or race of the
person or the type of crime. Among all parolees, many have significant education and
cognitive deficits, as well as substance abuse and mental health problems.
Contrary to the commonly quoted conclusion that “nothing works,” the evidence
shows that some approaches work for some offenders and that other approaches show
promise. Post release interventions that have shown measurable effects include

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treatment for substance abuse, especially when combined with frequent testing for drug
abuse, and cognitive behavioral therapy. Comprehensive, multiservice employment and
training programs and mentoring programs hold promise but require rigorous evaluation.
The committee offers a number of significant findings. First, cognitivebehavioral treatment programs reduce recidivism significantly. Second, the peak rates
of committing a new crime or violating the terms of parole occur in the first days, weeks,
and months after release. Third, deaths among releasees are very high in the first weeks
after release, more than 12 times the average for the general population. Clearly, the first
days and weeks out of prison are the riskiest for both releasees and the general public.
In addition, extensive longitudinal research on desistance highlights specific
conditions that lead to less offending: good and stable marriages and strong ties to work
appear to be particularly important. These findings seem somewhat at odds with
findings from program evaluation that individual-level change, including shifts in
cognitive thinking, education, and drug treatment, are likely to be more effective than
programs that increase opportunities for work, reunite families, and provide housing.
We caution, however, that many findings on the effects of desistance programs are
limited, generally because of inadequate program implementation and because of failure
to fully account for self-selection bias in evaluations.
These findings have major implications for the design of services and
interventions, for both parole systems and other community-based programs. A first-time
parolee who committed a violent crime needs a different program than a drug-using
repeat parolee who committed a drug crime. However, concentrating supervision and
services in the first days and weeks out of prison is likely to have most effects on
desistance.
RECOMMENDATIONS
The evidence on the rates of death and crime commission within the first weeks of
a person’s release argue strongly for a redirection of postrelease program and service
provision efforts to those first days and weeks after release. We recommend that parole
authorities and administrators of both in-prison and postrelease programs redesign their
activities and redirect their resources to provide major support to parolees and other
releasees at the time of release. Such programs may take many different forms,
including: intensive and detailed prerelease and postrelease counseling; immediate
enrollment in drug treatment programs, intense parole supervision; assistance in finding
work; short-term halfway houses; mentors who are available at the moment of release;
and assistance in obtaining identification, clothes, and other immediate needs. The key is
that a person should not leave prison without an immediately available person and plan
for postrelease life.
We also recommend that longer term assistance for parolees include cognitivebehavioral treatment approaches.

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RESEARCH NEEDS
Future research on parole and desistance needs to be more methodologically
rigorous. In program design, random assignment should be used when possible; when it
is not possible, more attention is needed to the selection of comparison groups and to the
use of appropriate statistical techniques to account for differences between program
participants and comparison groups. In program implementation, more attention is
needed to ensure fidelity to program principles and procedures. In program evaluation,
more attention is needed to avoid the possibility of self-selection bias.
Rigorous research is needed to explain gaps between the research findings on
what influences desistance and evaluation findings of program effects. Also needed are
improvements in the conceptualization and design of program content based on research
findings on desistance. Research is needed on how cognitive-behavioral treatment
approaches can be expanded effectively to meet current demands.
The committee’s findings and recommendation regarding the need for
interventions at the point of release present a unique opportunity for research. Because
different jurisdictions are likely to implement different programs for new releasees, these
“natural experiments” can be systematically studied to learn what works best for which
kinds of releasees. Closely related to research on early interventions for releasees is the
question of whether people who are going to “fail” usually do so quickly or whether early
interventions can make a difference—not only by delaying recidivism, but also by
reducing it. A related question is whether the higher recidivism rate for offenders with
multiple imprisonments is a function of their characteristics or the effects of the prison
and postprison experiences.
There has been little research on the effects of parolees (and other releasees) on
the local communities to which they return, particularly on crime rates. Also largely
missing has been research on the validity and significance of the arrest data for parolees.
For example, do parolees actually commit more crimes than people with similar
characteristics who live in the same neighborhoods, or are parolees arrested more often
only because they are under closer scrutiny? There is a related question from the reverse
perspective. What are the effects of neighborhood or community conditions—such as the
presence of high crime rates or drug markets or the availability of social and treatment
services—on parolees? A second related question is the role of arrests and returns to
prison for violations of specific conditions of parole contracts, rather than for new crimes:
Is imprisonment—rather than a short-term stay in jail or other sanction in the context of
continued parole supervision—the best way to deal with such violations, particularly in
light of the general overcrowding of U.S. prisons? Similarly, is the revocation of parole,
rather than a new prosecution, the best way to deal with a new offense by a parolee?
Looking at the parole system itself, there has been little research on its effects. A
range of questions need to be answered, including: What kinds of supervision work best
with what kinds of releasees? What are the effects of policies that bar parolees from
public-subsidized housing and other social services? Should parolees be released to
places other than their home communities—particularly if such communities are highcrime areas—in order to promote desistance? How can technological approaches, such
as the use of global positioning systems (GPSs), help parole authorities and promote
desistance? How effective are incentives that reward and promote desistance (e.g., less

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intrusive supervision or the remission of fines), compared with relying solely on
punishments for violating the terms of parole? What types of incentives are most
effective both for increasing desistance among parolees and for increasing the
performance and job satisfaction of parole officers?
The large number of parolees and other released prisoners in the country makes it
urgent to carry out research on the conditions, policies, and programs that will promote
desistance and successful reintegration into U.S. society.

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1
Introduction and Background
On December 31, 2005, the latest date for which figures are available, the United States
had a total incarceration rate of 737 per each 100,000 residents, by far the highest in the
industrialized world. About two-thirds of the incarcerated population (491 persons per 100,000
population) were in federal and state prisons; the remainder were in local jails (Harrison and
Beck, 2006). This rate reflects 30 years of steady growth in the use of imprisonment as
punishment for both violent and nonviolent crimes. Because of the upsurge in imprisonment
rates—a more than four-fold increase since 1980—the number of released prisoners has grown
sharply during the past decade. Unprecedented numbers of individuals now live in U.S.
communities under the supervision of parole, along with other former prisoners who are not
under formal supervision.
Many parolees subsequently return to custody, creating a constant supply of offenders to
feed ever-growing incarceration rates. These parolees and other former prisoners are the subject
of this report. Appropriate strategies to interrupt this cycle and to manage parolees and other
former prisoners are needed both to improve their chances for desistance from crime and
reintegration in communities, and to protect public safety. These strategies must be based on the
recognition that resources to help these populations are limited.
CONTEXT
The Population of Parolees
Roughly 600,000 people are released each year from state and federal prisons in the
United States, about 1,600 a day.1 Of the total, about 20 percent leave prison without any postprison supervision requirement, usually because they have served their full sentence (“maxed
out”). Of the 80 percent of offenders who leave prison before the end of their sentence, about 50
percent were released by mandate, and about 30 percent were released after review by a
discretionary parole board. However, whether an inmate is released as a result of a mandatory or
discretionary process, parole release is “conditional”: parolees are to serve out the remainder of
their sentences in the community under the supervision of state parole authorities.
All states except Maine and Virginia have mandatory or discretionary parole supervision
(for releasees who have not maxed out), although some states have changed its name to distance
themselves from negative associations with the term. The states’ parolee population grew 247
percent from 1980 to 2004, from 220,400 to 765,350.2 In 2004, 466,000 released prisoners
entered state parole systems across the country. About 88 percent of the parolees were males;
for both males and females, 40 percent were white, 41 percent were black, 18 percent were
1

Unless indicated otherwise, the statistics cited in this section are from the Bureau of Justice Statistics:
www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs [September 2006].
2
An additional 86,567 parolees were under federal jurisdiction in 2004. Parole under the federal system
has been periodically abolished, altered, and reinstated over the years; for the history of the U. S. Parole
Commission, see www.usdoj.gov/uspc/history.htm [October 2006].
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Hispanic, and the remaining 1 percent were non-Hispanics of other races. The average parolee
in 2004 was in his or her mid-30s. About 38 percent had been convicted and imprisoned for a
drug offense, 26 percent for a property offense, and 24 percent for a violent offense. The
remaining 12 percent had been imprisoned for other crimes, primarily public order offenses.
The average time served in prison in 2002, the latest date for which statistics are available, was
29 months (median time served was 17 months) (BJS 2002). Eventually, 93 percent of all U.S.
prisoners will be released (Petersilia, 2003).
The Parole and Reentry Systems
As long as there have been prisons, societies have struggled with how best to help prisoners
reintegrate in society when they are released.3 In the United States, prisoners who have not maxed out
are released to parole supervision. Whether they are released through a discretionary or mandatory
process, the majority of released prisoners will be subject to some sort of post-prison or parole
supervision.4 Parole is the responsibility of the executive branch of government. In most states, it is
administered by a board or commission appointed by the governor.
Parole, common in the United States for at least a century, can legally be defined as
releasing offenders from a correctional institution, after they have served a portion of their
sentence, under the continued custody of the state and under conditions that permit their
reincarceration in the event of a violation of the terms of parole (which may otherwise not be a
criminal offense). Parole, unlike probation, always occurs after some part of a court-imposed
prison term has been completed.
No prisoner has a legal right to parole. Rather, it is a privilege a state grants, through a
contractual arrangement with a prisoner, who signs a parole release contract in exchange for the
promise to abide by specified conditions. A state authority retains legal control of parolees until
they are formally dismissed from parole, which usually lasts between 1 to 3 years.5
Parole agents (or officers) are responsible for ensuring that parolees fulfill the terms of
their contracts. Most agents have the legal authority to carry and use firearms and to search
places, persons, and property without a warrant and without probable cause (otherwise required
by the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution). The search power applies to the household
where a parolee is living and the business place where a parolee is working. The ability to arrest,
confine, and, in some cases re-imprison a parolee for violating the conditions of the parole
agreement gives parole agents a great deal of discretionary authority.
Parole conditions can be roughly classified as general, applicable to all parolees, and
tailored, applicable to particular offenders. Standard parole conditions are similar throughout
most jurisdictions and usually include not committing crimes, not carrying a weapon, seeking
and maintaining employment, reporting changes of address, reporting to one’s parole agent, and
paying required victim and court restitution costs.
Tailored conditions are reserved for certain kinds of offenders or crimes. Tailored
conditions for sex offenders may require parolees to participate in sex offender therapy, register
3

This section is drawn from Petersilia (2003).
In indeterminate sentencing systems, a parole board releases inmates to parole supervision on the basis of
statutory or administrative determinations of eligibility. Inmates usually must serve some fraction of the minimum
or maximum sentence before becoming eligible for parole. In determinate sentencing systems, inmates are
conditionally released from prison when they have served their original sentence minus time off for good behavior.
5
Parole supervision can last much longer in some states: for example, Texas parole supervision is often for
10 to 20 years. A number of recently enacted laws require life-time supervision and registration of sex offenders.
4

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as sex offenders, and refrain from entering child safety zones. People convicted of domestic
assaults may be required not to contact their spouses, domestic partners, or other injured or
threatened family members. A growing number of parolees are now required to register with the
police when released from prison. Originally begun for sex offenders, registration is now
required of parolees convicted of arson, crimes against children, domestic violence, stalking, and
other offenses. The most common special condition for parolees is drug testing.
Some criminal justice experts argue that few parolees can meet all of the more stringent
conditions and that imposing and enforcing them almost guarantees failure. But many state
legislatures have become more “anticrime” in recent years, which has translated into both stricter
requirements for granting parole and stricter supervision and easier revocation procedures for
parolees.
If a parolee commits a new crime or fails to meet the conditions of the parole contract,
parole can be revoked and the parolee can be returned to prison. Violations of parole conditions
are often termed “technical violations,” but this characterization can be misleading because the
conditions encompass important obligations, such as refraining from contacting a previous
victim or from using alcohol, as well as purely procedural requirements, such as checking in with
the parole officer. Because parolees are still in the formal legal custody of prison authorities,
their constitutional rights are severely limited. When parole agents identify a violation by a
parolee, they notify their supervisors, who can initiate procedures to return a parolee to prison.
High parole revocation rates are one of the major factors linked to the growing U.S.
prison population. Each year, about 300,000 parolees are sent back to prison. About 70 percent
of returned prisoners self-report that their parole was revoked because of an arrest or conviction
for a new offense; 22 percent said they had absconded or otherwise failed to report to a parole
officer; 16 percent said they had a drug-related violation; and 18 percent reported other reasons,
such as failure to maintain employment or to meet financial obligations (Hughes et al., 2001).
Some prisoners are returned for two or more reasons. The number of offenders who are
reincarcerated due to parole revocation increased more than sevenfold between 1980 and 1999;
42 percent of the growth in total admissions to state prisons during that period was the result of
revocations for violations of specified parole conditions (Blumstein and Beck, 2005).
Parolees are required to report to their designated parole field office within a few days of
release. In most states, parolees are legally required to return to the county of their last
residence. The vast majority of parolees—80 percent—are supervised on “regular” caseloads,
averaging 67 cases to one parole officer, in which they are seen (face to face) less than twice a
month (Petersilia, 1999). Officers also may contact family members or employers to inquire
about the parolee’s progress.
Parole agents, in addition to monitoring contract compliance, also provide counseling and
broker community resources. In fact, parole agents historically have played an important role in
providing job assistance, family counseling, and chemical dependency testing and treatment
programs, mixing authority with help. This mixture is now sometimes seen as a conflict—
service versus surveillance. In a way, parole officers can be thought of as gun-carrying social
workers. Today, parole agents seldom provide direct counseling services, but many do still
orchestrate referrals to community agencies. Of course, the help parolees receive differs vastly,
depending on the state and jurisdiction in which they are being supervised.
In addition to regular caseloads, most parole agencies also have specialized caseloads
designed to provide group counseling for such conditions as drug use and unemployment or for
the special concerns raised by the supervision of mentally ill people, people with developmental

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disabilities, and sex offenders. However, this is a very small part of most parole systems:
overall, less than 4 percent of all parolees are supervised on specialized caseloads (Petersilia,
2003). Virtually every state uses a classification system for assigning parolees to different levels
of supervision and specialized caseloads.
Many parole officers are frustrated because they lack the time and resources to do the
kind of job they believe is maximally helpful to their clients. Parole officers often complain that
paperwork has increased, their clients have more serious problems, and that their caseloads are
much higher than the 35-50 cases that have been considered the ideal caseload for a parole
officer. As Michael Jacobson (2005, p. 155) recently wrote:
Parole officers are doing exactly what parole systems ask them to do; they work with few
resources and experience constant pressure, including anxieties about whether someone
on their caseload will be the next murderer of a Polly Klass. Indeed, a combination of
high caseloads, few internal resources, and frequently, political condemnation makes
their job one of the most difficult and stressful in the criminal justice system.
One naturally wonders whether simply reducing an officer’s caseload would result in
more compliance with parole contracts and fewer new criminal offenses. A national
demonstration project that evaluated the effects of reduced caseloads actually showed higher
rates of violations of parole agreements for parolees who were supervised on small caseloads,
because officers were able to watch them more closely to uncover more of their misdeeds
(Petersilia and Turner, 1993). But this study also found that when probationers and parolees
were subject to both surveillance and appropriate treatment, their arrest rates were 10 to 20
percent lower than other probationers and parolees. Program evaluations in Texas, Wisconsin,
Oregon, and Colorado have shown similarly encouraging results.
High-quality parole supervision costs more than regular supervision, and the program
costs are driven by the risks and needs of participants and the surveillance and services provided.
Currently, about $2,000-$4,000 per year per parolee is spent for regular parole supervision. The
average yearly cost of supervising the 117,000 parolees in California (18 percent of all U.S. state
parolees are in California) is now $4,067 per parolee, while parole failures cost the state $10,000
per parolee (California Legislative Analyst’s Office, 2007). In contrast, other intermediate
sanctions—such as electronic monitoring, day reporting centers, or effective substance abuse
programs—are estimated to cost between $5,000 and $20,000 per client per year.
Public Policy Issues
Parolees pose multiple challenges for the communities to which they are released. Many
leave prison with unresolved substance abuse and mental health problems, lack of skills for
employment, and have housing needs. A majority (53%) of state inmates used illicit drugs in the
month before their offense, while a third (32%) committed their current offense under the
influence of drugs. Nearly one-half of the violent offenders in state prisons (47%) met the criteria
for recent drug dependence or abuse, and 10 percent said the need to get money for drugs was a
motive in their crimes (Mumola and Karberg, 2006). Participation in drug abuse programs has
increased among state and federal inmates with recent drug use histories, but it is still
surprisingly low. Among state inmates who used drugs in the month before the offense, only 39

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percent reported taking part in drug treatment or other drug programs since admission (Mumola
and Karberg, 2006).
The deinstitutionalization policy that started in the 1960s shifted the focus of care of
people with mental illness from psychiatric hospitals to local communities. As a result, states
closed many of their mental hospitals and people with mental illnesses were increasingly arrested
and jailed; most of them are eventually released on parole. In a Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS)
study of mental illness, using prisoners’ self-reports, Ditton (1999) reported that 16.2 percent of
state prison inmates were estimated to be mentally ill, reporting either a mental or emotional
condition or an overnight stay in a mental hospital or program. Among parolees, 12 percent
were homeless at the time of their arrest, and they face significant housing barriers at release (see
Petersilia, 2003).
If parolees commit a new criminal offense or violate the specified conditions of parole
supervision (e.g., fail a drug test), they can be returned to prison to serve out the remainder of the
sentence for which they were originally convicted and incarcerated or to serve a new sentence.
Regardless of how it is measured, the “failure” rate is very high among released prisoners. A
Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) study of state prisoners released in 15 states in 1994 found that
fully two-thirds were rearrested and just over one-half were returned to prison within 3 years
(Langan and Levin, 2002). The probability of rearrest was higher among males, younger people,
property offenders, and those with longer arrest records. Rearrest prevalence also was
significantly higher among parolees who had previously been incarcerated and released than
among first-time parolees, even with age, offense type, prior arrests, and other predictors
controlled (Rosenfeld, Wallman, and Fornango, 2005). This population of “repeat parolees”
poses especially difficult challenges to parole agencies, if only because they have failed at
community reentry at least once before.
In the BJS study, rearrest rates among parolees released in 1994 were sharply higher
during the next 3 years than arrest rates in the general population. Parolees accounted for an
estimated 10-15 percent of all violent, property, and drug arrests between 1994 and 1997, and the
share of total arrests attributable to released prisoners grew as general crime rates declined
during the 1990s (Rosenfeld, Wallman, and Fornango, 2005). Most released prisoners who are
arrested for new crimes will be returned to prison—and most of them will be released again.
The strain on communities to deal with released prisoners has increased in recent years as
a result of several factors. More people are being sentenced to terms of incarceration and,
consequently, the number being released on parole at any given time has grown. In addition,
many prisoners are transferred from one institution to another for disciplinary purposes or to
relieve crowding, leaving less time for longer term programs that might help offenders prepare
for release and reintegration in society. There has also been less money (on a per person basis)
for such programs in recent years. Prerelease programs are not flexible enough to set priorities
for services on the basis of the distribution of time served in the population needing programs.
The increase in mandatory supervised parole also has led to larger caseloads for parole agents.
Here, too, in most states, there have not been increases in funds for parole supervision
commensurate with the increase in the number of parolees.
TERMINOLOGY
Many terms are used to characterize both people currently in jail or prison and those who
have spent time in those institutions. For clarity and to frame the discussion, we have adopted

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the terminology laid out in this section. We note first that although the focus of this report is
almost exclusively on people who have been released from prisons, some of the terms and some
of the discussion also include people released from jails.6
The terms “inmate” and “incarcerated” refer to people in prison (or jail). People who
have been released from a prison or jail after serving a sentence are “releasees.” This term
covers everyone who has spent time in a prison (or jail): people who served their full terms;
people who served less than their full terms because of time off for good behavior, prison
crowding, or any other reason; people with a formal parole agreement; and people under any
other kind of post-incarceration supervision. The term excludes people who left jails without
being charged or were exonerated at trial. It also excludes people on probation—those who have
been found guilty but not sent to jail or prison--and those whose final sentencing will depend on
their behavior while on probation.
The term “parolee” is used to refer to persons who are currently on parole, under the
supervision of parole authorities, whether released by a parole board or some other mechanism.
Where the term releasee is used interchangeably with parolee it should be understood to mean
releasee’s minus those who have served their full term.
“Reentry” is the process of leaving prison and returning to a community. “Reintegration”
is the most recently used term to define the transition from incarceration to life outside an
institution, in a community. However, in this report, reentry is used interchangeably with
reintegration. Reentry is a more neutral term: reentry can be successful or not, and there is a
continuum. One can think of completely successful reentry as a person’s having a place to live,
a job, not committing crimes, and otherwise being a fully integrated member of a community.
At the other end of the continuum, one can think of homelessness, unemployment, and the
violation of the terms of parole or the commission of new crimes as characteristic of failed
reentry. Successful reentry may facilitate the maintenance of desistance from crime ,Desistance
is a term that shifts the focus of policy from the negative to the positive: instead of focusing on
the releasees who return to prison, it focuses on those who refrain from or lessen their criminal
behavior as well as other negative behaviors, such as substance abuse, that may lead to crime or
violations of specified conditions of release.
Although “recidivism” is a common term in criminal justice, we try to use it as little
possible in this report, for four reasons. First, it covers people returned to prison both for
violating the terms of parole and for committing new criminal offenses, yet for public policy
purposes it may be useful to consider these two populations separately. Second, the term focuses
on the negative outcome for releasees: again, for public policy purposes, it may be more useful
to focus on what programs or interventions can contribute to a positive outcome. Third, the
term implies a simple 0 or 1 outcome: either a person is returned to prison or not; yet desistance
from criminal behavior, like cessation of smoking or drug use or even dieting, may involve
several attempts over time. If some people desist from committing offenses for longer and
longer periods of time or otherwise moderate their criminal behavior, it is useful information for
policy makers. Finally, our charge (see below) does not use the term. However, given that
much of the research in criminal justice uses the term and attempts to measure recidivism, we
cannot completely eliminate the word from our analyses or our report.
6

Generally speaking, prisons are run by states or the federal government and house people sentenced to
terms of more than 1 year; jails are run by counties or other local jurisdictions and house people who have been
arrested but not yet charged, who have been charged but not yet tried, or who are serving sentences of less than 1
year.
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An underlying public policy issue that is related to terminology is the goal of parole as a
crime control method: Is the goal to send noncompliant parolees back to prison as quickly as
possible or to facilitate desistance from criminal behavior? This basic question affects how
policy makers, as well as police, parole agents, and others in the criminal justice system, view
their jobs and the parolees.
COMMITTEE CHARGE AND APPROACH
The National Institute of Justice (NIJ) of the U.S. Department of Justice asked the
National Research Council to establish an ad hoc committee to conduct a workshop-based study
on the role of parole and other forms of postrelease supervision in promoting the rehabilitation
and successful reentry of former prisoners, including their desistance from criminal activity and
their reintegration into families, neighborhoods, the workforce, and the civic life of the
community.
In accordance with the terms of the charge, the workshop focused on the empirical
underpinnings and evaluations of new or emerging models of community supervision and the
likelihood that these kinds of models can promote various distinct outcomes, such as desistance
from crime and adherence to conditions of parole, as well as institutional support for the service
needs of ex-prisoners and their families. The workshop provided a basis for the development of
a research agenda that is addressed in the report.
The presentations and discussions at the workshop were designed to consider the
following topics:
1. data and research on traditional and current parole practices in order to understand
the current state of practice in parole and other forms of post release supervision,
2.
new and emerging models of community supervision, especially the empirical or
theoretical underpinnings or evaluations of these models and their effect on desistance as well as
on successful reentry,
3. the infrastructures necessary for successful reentry and the role of community
supervision in those infrastructures.
4. a research agenda on the effects of community supervision on different outcomes,
such as desistance from further criminal activity; adherence to conditions of parole and
successful reentry into the community.
The request from NIJ reflects both public concern and congressional attention. In 2005,
legislation was introduced in both houses of Congress calling for both new grants and the
continuation of existing programs to encourage successful prisoner reentry. The proposed
legislation also called for studies of the effects on children of having an incarcerated parent; the
characteristics and circumstances of former prisoners who do not return to prison; and returning
prisoners who present special challenges, such as having severe mental illness, and those who
represent the greatest threat to public safety. Although this legislative proposal was not enacted,
it is clear that the subject of the reentry of former prisoners to society is a major public policy
issue.
In looking at releasees, it is important to recognize that prisoners reentering society are a
small proportion—less than 10 percent—of the approximately 7 million people who are under
supervision of the criminal justice system at any given time. The total includes people awaiting

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trial, people on probation and parole, and people in jails and prison (Bureau of Justice Statistics,
2006b). By far the largest group is people on probation, who in 2004 accounted for almost 60
percent of the total (Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2006a).
Although parolees make up a relatively small percentage of people under supervision of
the criminal justice system, the total, as noted above, is now more than 600,000 annually.
Moreover, most of the people released from prisons go to a small number of cities—about 20—
and to neighborhoods in those cities that have some of the highest crime rates in the nation
(Travis, 2004). Because parolees who have been released more than once before have very high
reoffending rates their effect on these communities can be significant, and what can be done to
support their successful reentry to society is therefore critical to neighborhood stability.
Although this report focuses only on people released from prisons and under parole supervision
in the community, some of the issues may well be the same for other people who reside in these
high-crime communities, particularly probationers.
The Committee on Community Supervision and Desistance from Crime, held its
workshop on January 18, 2006, in Irvine, California. Papers were presented by four
distinguished researchers, and there were two discussants for each paper, one researcher and one
practitioner (see Appendix A for the workshop agenda The four topics of the presentations and
discussion had been selected by the committee as possibly important issues in carrying out its
charge: (1) Is treatment the road to rehabilitation? Promoting offender change through
accountability; (2) a behavioral management approach to supervision; (3) searching for a judicial
model of reentry and community supervision; and (4) triage: resource allocation for probation
and parole. After the workshop, the committee commissioned a fifth paper on faith-based
programs for ex-offenders.
The committee met twice in the months following the workshop, to consider the topics
discussed at the workshop, the issue of faith-based programs, and what turned out to be
significant new research on important aspects of desistance and community supervision. The
committee did not complete its work as quickly as it had anticipated, in large part because of the
new work we identified and the need to integrate those findings with older work. While there is
still a great that is not known about the processes of desistance and community supervision of
former prisoners, the committee is encouraged that research is identifying some effective policies
and practices, as well as key questions for future research.
SCOPE OF THE REPORT
After its workshop, the committee held two meetings to consider revised versions of the
papers and develop this report, based on the papers and the broader literature in the field.
Because of the limits on our resources, we have had to be highly selective with respect to the
specific populations, issues, and topics covered in this report. As indicated above, our focus is
on parolees—people released from prison and supervised in the community. We do not address
the distinctive issues associated with the supervision and desistance from crime of the much
larger population of probationers: people who are sentenced to community supervision in lieu of
imprisonment. Nor do we address the problems and needs of people who are awaiting trial or
are serving sentences of 1 year or less in local jails.
There are also several classes of offenders that we do not consider explicitly, in part
because of the lack of research. We do not explicitly consider the special legal, supervision, and

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treatment issues connected with sex offenders, a topic of great public concern and controversy
that merits its own comprehensive assessment. We note, however, that more than 95 percent of
parolees are not sex offenders. We also do not separately consider juveniles, who are generally
believed to have distinct problems and needs.
Many of the needs, challenges, and treatment and supervision considerations that apply to
parolees also apply to other populations of ex-offenders; in fact, most parolees at one time or
another also serve probation sentences and spend time in local jails. It is best, then, to think of a
parolee not as a special kind of person, but as a distinctive criminal justice status with
similarities to and differences from other statuses. We identify these similarities and differences
as appropriate throughout the report.
Chapter 2 of the report looks at concepts and definitions of desistance, which are critical
to understanding how parole works and how it might work differently. Chapter 3 then examines
how parole currently works. Chapter 4 looks at the services and programs that are available for
parolees (and, in most cases, other releasees) and the evidence about their effectiveness. Chapter
5 considers community issues—what burdens do parolees place on them and what can they offer
to parolees—with particular attention to courts. Chapter 6 presents the committee’s summary of
what is known and what needs to be known about parole and desistance, including reintegration
of former prisoners.
Our treatment of each of these topics is guided by the report’s overarching themes of the
heterogeneity of the parole population and intervention effects, especially the implementation
challenges of policies and programs designed to improve the supervision of parolees in
communities, address their service and treatment needs, and facilitate desistance from
reoffending.
Our analysis is constrained by the paucity of research that has been done and its
limitations. The most prominent limitation—in terms of this report—is the lack of specificity
about the population of study: parolees and other releasees are rarely distinguished in the
research. Another limitation is the lack of comprehensive jurisdiction- and individual-level data
on the characteristics of parolees and their prison and post-prison experiences. We address these
and other research limitations in the report’s final chapter.

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2
Dimensions of Desistance

CONCEPT AND DEFINITIONS
Zero Offending or Less Offending?
“Desistance” from crime is a common term in criminal justice research.1 Most
offenders, after all, eventually stop offending. Yet there is relatively little theoretical
conceptualization about crime cessation, the various reasons for desistance, or the
mechanisms underlying it.
Conceptually, there are several fundamental questions about desistance. For
example, can desistance occur after one act of crime? If so, are the processes of
desistance from a single act of crime different from those following several acts of crime?
Is there such a thing as “spontaneous remission”? If so, can the term be precisely
defined? One definition of spontaneous remission is desistance that occurs absent any
external intervention (Stall and Biernacki, 1986). How can permanent desistance (the
absence of acts of crime forever) be distinguished from temporary desistance (the
absence of crimes for some amount of time)?
Should a change from serious criminal acts to less serious ones be characterized
as a type of desistance? In a similar vein, if criminal acts cease, but other problem
behaviors (such as alcoholism or other drug use) persist or increase, what does it mean
about the nature of desistance? All of these issues raise critical questions about the
meaning of desistance, and, consequently, about how to measure it or determine whether
it is occurring.
Whether using official records or self-reports, it is clear that how one defines
desistance affects the measures and determinations about who desists and the relative size
of the desisting population (for discussion of these issues, respectively, see Bushway,
Thornberry, and Krohn, 2003; Brame, Bushway, and Paternoster, 2003). Kazemian
(2007) reviews various operational definitions in past studies of desistance, which include
convictions at age 21 but not between ages 21 and 32 (Farrrington and Hawkins, 1991),
the absence of a new officially recorded offense or probation violation in a 2-year period
(Kruttschnitt, Uggen and Shelton, 2000) and the absence of self-reported illegal earnings
during a 1-year period (Pezzin, 1995; see also Kazemian, 2007: Table 1, for more details
from additional studies). Kazemian (2007, p. 8) concludes that the “substantial degree of
variability in the conceptualization of desistance … has led to disparate results regarding
the causes and correlates of desistance from crime.”
The issue of reintegration in society is considered as part of desistance in this
report because the committee believes it may be a necessary condition for the
maintenance of desistance. A recent National Research Council (2005) report notes that
1

This section is drawn from Laub and Sampson (2001)

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there is little standardization of how outcomes such as desistance or recidivism should be
measured in the evaluation of programs. Moreover, the findings on desistance from
crime as a result of informal social controls come from longitudinal research, not
program evaluation research. Empirical work is needed to examine how different
definitions of desistance, as well as different research approaches, affect research
outcomes.
There is currently no agreed-on definition of desistance, but there is a growing
consensus among researchers that it is best defined as a process, not an event, in which
the frequency of crimes decelerates and exhibits less variety (see Bushway et al., 2001;
Laub and Sampson, 2003; Maruna, 2001; Uggen and Massoglia, 2003; Weitekamp and
Kerner, 1994; Lober and LeBlanc, 1990; LeBlanc and Frechette, 1989). For example,
Maruna (2001, p. 17) defines desistance not as an event that happens, but, rather, as “the
sustained absence of a certain type of event (in this case, crime).”
Blumstein et al. (1986) noted that care must be taken not to erroneously attribute
the absence of further crime events near the end of an observation period or at the end of
a specific age to (career) desistance rather than to the random time between events.
Improved measures of the permanent absence of offending, which remains the clearest
definition of desistance from crime, are needed.
Laub and Sampson (2001, 2003) have argued that it is important to analytically
distinguish termination of offending from the concept of desistance: “termination” refers
to the time at which one stops criminal activity, while “desistance” is the causal process
that supports the termination of offending. While it is difficult to ascertain when the
process of desistance actually begins, it is apparent that it continues after the termination
of offending. In their view, the process of desistance maintains the continued state of
nonoffending.
More Prosocial Outcomes
In addition to the cessation or reduction of criminal activities, the concept of
desistance as a process generally also encompasses positive outcomes in terms of
individuals’ behavior and integration into society. “[The] successful establishment of
bonds with conventional others and participation in conventional activities are major
contingencies on the path that leads to termination of a criminal career" (Shover, 1996, p.
126). More recently, Uggen and Massoglia (2003, p. 317) have argued that “desistance
is a process characterized by particular behavioral states or markers” that is marked by
the assumption of “adult occupational and family roles” (2003, p. 317). Along similar
lines, Maruna (2001, 7) has contended that desistance is only possible when ex-offenders
“develop a coherent, prosocial identity for themselves.” Thus, desistance is also
generally viewed in terms of social integration or reintegration.
Marriage
Family and work seem to be especially important in the desistance process. The
association of marriage with lower crime among men has been widely reported in both
quantitative and qualitative studies (Farrington and West, 1995; Horney, Osgood and
Marshall, 1995; Irwin, 1970; Laub and Sampson, 2003, Maume, Ousey and Beaver,
2005; Sampson and Laub, 1993; Shover, 1996; Warr, 1998; for a general overview, see
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Laub and Sampson, 2001). Marriage, especially strong marital attachment, has thus been
identified as a significant factor in desistance for men.
Recent research has extended this finding to women (King et al., 2007), but the
researchers find the effects for marriage are less robust for women than they are for men.
The King et al. study is an important one because it uses propensity score matching to
estimate the causal effects of marriage. They use a contemporary dataset (The National
Youth Survey), and they extend the analysis of marriage and crime to men and women.
They find marriage reduces offending for males, especially for those men with a low
propensity to marry. They find that marriage reduces offending for females, but only for
those with a moderate propensity to marry.
A change in criminal behavior may not necessarily result from marriage alone;
rather, a change may occur in response to an enduring attachment that emerges from
entering into a good marriage. From this perspective, the growth of social bonds is like
an investment process (Laub and Sampson, 1993, pp. 310-311; Nagin and Paternoster,
1994, pp. 586-588). As the investment in social bonds grows, the incentive for avoiding
crime increases because more is at stake. Empirical support for the idea of marriage as
an investment process comes from research findings that early marriages characterized by
social cohesiveness led to a growing preventive effect (Laub, Nagin, and Sampson,
1998).
Marriage also influences desistance because it often leads to significant changes
in everyday routines. It is well known that life-styles and routine activities are a major
source of variation in exposure to crime and victimization (Hindelang, Gottfredson, and
Garolo, 1978; Cohen and Felson, 1979). For example, participation in unstructured
socializing activities with peers increases the frequency of deviant behaviors among those
ages 18 to 26 (Osgood et al., 1996). Marriage has the potential to radically alter routine
activities, especially with regard to one's peer group. As Osgood and Lee (1993) have
argued, marriage entails obligations that tend to reduce leisure activities outside of the
family. It is reasonable to assume that married people will spend more time together than
with their same-sex peers. There is supporting empirical evidence that the transition to
marriage is followed by a decline in time spent with friends and with exposure to
delinquent peers (Warr, 1998, 183). Marriage, therefore, has the potential to cut off an
ex-offender from peers at risk of re-offending.
A recent study has addressed the issue of the causal direction of the relationship
between marriage and desistance from crime. That study (Sampson, Laub, and Wimer,
2006) adopted a counterfactual life-course approach using yearly data from a sample of a
group of 500 high-risk boys followed prospectively from adolescence to age 32 and a
subsample of 52 men followed to age 70. The researchers found that being married is
associated with an average reduction of approximately 35 percent in the odds of a
criminal act for the married men in comparison with the nonmarried men (see also King,
Massoglia, and MacMillan 2007).
The researchers argue that marriage has a “knifing off” effect in the lives
disadvantaged men. They theorize that marriage may offer the opportunity for new
relationships and social supports; may change the routine activities engaged in by these
men, especially unstructured time with peers; may create a more structured set of
activities that are in many ways “supervised” by the spouse; and may transform the

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identity of the offender in ways that allow a life of greater responsibility as a spouse and
parent (Laub and Sampson, 2003).
While these results are robust, supporting the inference that states of marriage
causally inhibit crime over a person’s life, the data used in the study are not recent.
Using more recent data from the 1970s, Piquero and his colleagues (2002) found that
conventional marriages inhibited continuity in criminal activity generally for both whites
and nonwhites. However, the researchers found that conventional marriage did not
appear to significantly inhibit violent arrests among nonwhites. They also found that
common-law marriages increased crime (both violent and nonviolent) for nonwhites, but
was insignificant for whites.
Using data based on interviews with 658 newly convicted male offenders
sentenced to the Nebraska Department of Correctional Services during a 9-month period
in 1989-1990, Horney, Osgood and Marshall (1995) also found that while marriage
reduces offending, cohabitation increases it (Horney, Osgood, and Marshall 1995, p.
659). This finding is important in light of the fact that by 2002, only 48 percent of black
families were headed by married couples, down from 70 percent during the 1960s
(Kinnon 2003; Wilson 2002; Huebner 2005, 2007, and that one factor influencing this
decline is the rise of incarceration rates,
among black men since 1980 (Kiecolt and Fossett, 1997). It would be important,
therefore, to study the effects of marriage on reentry outcomes among a contemporary
population of released prisoners. Data on the effects of marriage on this reentering
population are needed.
Building on research about the positive effects of healthy marriages, the
Administration for Children, Youth and Families (ACF) in the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services (DHHS) has designed and funded the Community Healthy Marriage
Initiative (CHMI), a nationwide program that has been implemented in over 20 sites
(U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2007). A national evaluation of the
CHMI has been funded through 2010 to compare outcomes in the CHMI communities
with outcomes in comparison communities that are well matched to the project sites. The
study focuses on evaluation of community-level approaches to encourage changes in
norms that increase support for healthy marriages.
In 2006, with funds provided under the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, an
estimated $4 million dollars, was made available for responsible fatherhood, marriage,
and family strengthening grants for incarcerated fathers and their partners. The program
supports services to promote or sustain healthy marriage primarily to unmarried couples
or married couples where one parent is incarcerated or has been recently released from
prison or jail or is on probation or parole. The Office of the Assistant Secretary for
Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) in DHSS will support an evaluation of the performance
of these grants. Technical assistance will be provided to grantees that need help in
complying with evaluation requirements.
Work
Like marriage, strong ties to work can lead to desistance from crime. One study
using longitudinal data found that job stability was strongly related to desistance from

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crime (Sampson and Laub, 1993). In a similar vein, a study using qualitative data
showed that acquiring a satisfying job was an important contingency in the lives of men
who desisted from crime (Shover, 1996). However, as in the case of marriage, the nature
of the relationship between work and desistance is not known: it is possible that
“selection effects” are affecting that link: some factor or factors that predispose persons
to find and remain in stable employment may also predispose them to desist from crime.
One of the most convincing attempts to counteract selection bias comes from an
analysis of data from a national work experiment that drew participants from poor urban
neighborhoods in nine U.S. cities. Overall, the people who were given jobs through the
experiment showed no reduction in crime relative to those in a control group (Uggen,
2000). However, age significantly interacted with employment to affect the timing of
illegal earnings and arrest. Participants aged 27 or older were more likely to desist when
provided with even marginal employment. For younger participants, the experimental
job treatment had no effect on desistance. The findings from Uggen (2000) are important
because the experimental nature of the data addresses the selectivity issue that has
plagued much of the research on desistance. By specifying event history models
accounting for assignment to, eligibility for, and participation in the National Supported
Work Demonstration Project, this study provides more refined estimates of the effects of
work as a turning point in the lives of offenders. Unfortunately, data for this study were
collected from 1975-1979. Given changes in labor markets since the 1970s and current
employment prospects for uneducated whites and minorities, the finding that work is a
turning point may also be outdated.
More recently, Rossi and Roman (2003), in their evaluation of the Opportunities
to Succeed (OPTS) Program, found that full-time employment among releasees increased
with greater interaction with case managers and with higher levels of participation in
drug treatment programs and that an increase in levels of employment was a predictor of
reductions in drug dealing, violent crime, and property crime.
Bloom (2006) notes that there have been few rigorous studies of recent,
employee-focused reentry models. A similar conclusion is reached by Visher,
Winterfield, and Coggeshall (2005). New models of work programs for releasees, such
as the Safer Foundation’s Ready4Work model that is also being tested by the U.S.
Department of Labor, focus on providing coordinated services both before and after an
inmate is released. Evaluations of such models show results that are only somewhat
positive.
DESISTANCE AND PAROLE
For individual offenders, the major functions of imprisonment are retribution,
removing dangerous people from the community, rehabilitation, and specific deterrence
of future offending after release. The goals of parole supervision are similar and can be
broadly conceived as “service” and “surveillance”: the rehabilitation of releasees and
facilitation of their reentry in a community and the deterrence of crime and crime-related
behaviors. In this framework, parole then serves as a sorting function by identifying
releasees who fail quickly and returning them to prison in order to protect communities
and by making services available to those who might most benefit from them.
Successful reintegration of offenders protects the communities in which they reside.

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Thus, the purposes of parole supervision are more utilitarian, integrative, and
rehabilitative than the purposes of incarceration; retribution recedes into the background.
Understanding the possible links between desistance from crime and community
reintegration has important implications for designing correctional policies, especially
parole. One strategy is the greater use of community-based corrections in order to assist
offenders in their reintegration in a community. According to a life-course theory of agegraded informal social control (Sampson and Laub, 1993 ), effective sanctions should
include methods of building social bonds to family, employment, and the community
when offenders are released from prison. That is, they would combine treatment and
services that promote connections with the community with appropriate emphasis on
surveillance.
Emphasizing the importance of treatment and services for the reduction of
criminal behavior does not mean that community safety need be compromised.
Community corrections strategies can provide effective surveillance and control of
offenders to maintain the safety of a community while avoiding the placement of
offenders in the potentially criminogenic environment of prison, an example of which is
found in a recent study by Bhati (2007). For a sample of prisoners released from state
prisons in 1994, Bhati used preincarceration arrest patterns to construct anticipated
postrelease offending trajectories. A comparison of these counterfactuals with the actual
postrelease offending patterns suggests that about 4 percent more returned to offending
than was projected (i.e., they had a criminogenic experience in prison). Overall, 40
percent were deterred from future offending (i.e., were not rearrested after release), while
the majority (56%), were merely incapacitated, that is, neither deterred nor rehabilitated
by incarceration since they were found to revert back to anticipated offending patterns.
Program components aimed at improving informal social controls and providing social
support may reduce such criminal behavior, thus reducing the need for future
incarceration or surveillance of releasees (see Laub and Allen, 1999). Moreover,
community sanctions can promote offender accountability to their victims and to the
community at large. In a paper presented at the workshop, Taxman notes that recent
literature in the field has highlighted the way that natural support systems and informal
social controls can augment and enhance the formal social controls imposed by
correctional agencies. Informal social controls may encourage people to commit to a
prosocial life-style and to develop new networks that include law-abiding citizens, not
only through employment and families, but also through other types of community
engagement, such as participating in the work of neighborhood associations or volunteer
work (see also Uggen and Manza, 2004).
In the long run, if involvement in serious crime and delinquency automatically
curtails future opportunities, releasees will have fewer incentives and options to desist
and lead conventional lives. Many new laws in effect have permanently disenfranchised
ex-offenders from employment opportunities, housing assistance, welfare benefits, and
political rights (see Petersilia, 2003; Travis, 2004; Manza and Uggen, 2006). Such
policies serve as barriers for ex-offenders to reconnect to the institutions that have been
demonstrated as important in the desistance process, especially work and family. Thus,
current policies regarding ex-offenders may produce unintended criminogenic effects by
further damaging offenders’ already weak social bonds and cutting them off from
promising avenues for desistance and reintegration into communities.

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WHO OFFENDS? WHO DESISTS?
There are multiple pathways and factors involved in desistance from crime,
including marriage and work, as noted above. Transformation of personal identify—that
is, cognitive change as a precursor to behavioral change—has also been documented
(Maruna, 2001; Giordano, Cernkovich, and Rudolph, 2002). Reduced exposure to
delinquent peers fosters desistance from crime for youthful offenders (Warr, 1998).
Perhaps the most obvious and simplest pathway to desistance from crime is aging:
offending declines with age for all offenses (Glueck and Glueck, 1974; Gottfredson and
Hirschi, 1990; Laub and Sampson, 2003). However, in spite of the evidence to date,
interventions designed to help men and women desist from criminal behavior have been
slow to target these factors, with the exception of those related to employment—job
readiness, training, and placement programs. Such programs are easier to implement
than programs concerned with marriage and family and peer associations.
One factor that appears to increase desistance from crime is reduced consumption
of illegal drugs. The Federal Bureau of Prisons Office of Research and Evaluation
(2000) evaluated its residential drug treatment program, which includes a transitional
component that keeps former prisoners engaged in treatment as they return to their home
communities. A rigorous research design included three methodologies to account for
selection bias. More than 2,000 individuals were included in the research. After 3 years,
treatment subjects were significantly less likely to be rearrested or have their parole
revoked, than the control subjects (52% and 44%) and less likely to use drugs (58% and
50%). These results mean reduction in recidivism of about 16 percent. Arrests for all
offenders also showed differences. Employment rates showed no differences. Moreover,
in a 12-year follow-up of a sample of cocaine-dependent releasees, Hser and colleagues
(2006) found that men who were continually abstinent for at least 5 years reported less
past year involvement in crime, unemployment, and abuse of other substances than those
who continued to use cocaine.
Other factors have also been proposed as important in the desistance process.
With regard to education, Locher and Moretti (2004) found that education decreases
arrest and incarceration, based on prisoner, arrest, and self-report data. Other factors for
which there is little or mixed evidence include residential change, religion, criminal
justice sanctions, criminal justice supervision (probation and parole), and a wide range of
correctional and community interventions.
THE PROCESS OF INDIVIDUAL CHANGE
There is remarkable heterogeneity in criminal offending. Some offenders have
short careers in one or a variety of crimes; other offenders have very long careers. A few
specialize in one type of criminal activity, while most appear to commit a variety of
crimes. From a theoretical perspective, rather than thinking in the simplistic 0-1
categories of offenders and nonoffenders, it is useful to view criminality as following a
path consisting of one or more crime and noncrime cycles (Glaser, 1969). Research on
ex-offenders has shown that men typically do not commit crimes continually for long
periods of time: instead, they "follow a zig-zag path . . . going from non crime to crime

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and to non crime again. Sometimes this sequence is repeated many times, but sometimes
they clearly go to crime only once; sometimes these shifts are for long duration or even
permanent, and sometimes they are short lived" (Glaser, 1969, p. 58; see also Piquero,
2004).
Processes of desistance have emerged that are common across a variety of
problem behavior areas, including crime (Fagan, 1989). First, the decision to stop
appears to be preceded by a variety of negative consequences, both formal and informal,
such as a prison sentence or the loss of a job. Second, multiple processes appear to be
involved in sustaining and reinforcing the decision to change. Research on alcoholism,
smoking, and obesity show commonalities in a process of three basic stages of behavior
change: motivation and commitment, initial behavior change, and maintenance of
change (Brownell et al., 1986). Given this pattern, a realistic goal for ex-offenders,
especially for high-rate offenders released from prison, is not zero offending, but reduced
offending (reduced in terms of frequency and seriousness) and increased lengths of
nonoffending periods. Empirical research on desistance has consistently demonstrated
that this goal can be achieved.2
There appears to be an important distinction between lapses (slips) and relapse,
and much could be learned about the processes of change if more were known about
which slips lead to relapses and which do not (Brownell et al., 1986). There is some
evidence to suggest that the determinants of lapses are different from the determinants of
relapses. For instance, lapses are more commonly associated with situational factors, and
relapses are related to individual factors such as negative emotional states or stress events
(Brownell et al., 1986). It would also be valuable to know more about the timing of
lapses in the change process, how this process applies to desistance from crime, and how
it operates in a context of severe official sanctions, such as reincarceration, which
typically are not part of the dynamics of behavioral change for addictive disorders.
What is most important from this perspective is that the goal of desistance
programs is not necessarily zero offending, but less offending and less serious offending.
Less crime does not mean no crime: it is important for policy makers and program
administrators to have realistic goals and to have forms of punishments and rewards
available that will support those realistic goals.
DESISTANCE PROGRAMS
Kinds of Analysis
Programs to encourage desistance from crime have both advantages and
disadvantages, including budgetary costs. A cost-benefit analysis is one standard way to
assess programs. In doing so, however, one must keep in mind that the benefits of a
desistance program are often not confined to reductions in criminality. Similarly, postincarceration programs and policies not specifically aimed at reducing recidivism—such
as those for drug treatment, mental health care, adult education, job training, and
measures to increase the effective market wages for low-skilled labor—may result in
2

For an extensive review, see Laub and Sampson (2001) and citations therein. In addition, see
Laub and Sampson (2003), Sampson and Laub (2003), Sampson and Laub (2006), and Ezell and Cohen
(2005).
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desistance as a benefit. For example, with regard to substance abuse, research has found
that nonusers are less likely to return to prison (Wexler and Colleagues, 1999). However
a program is labeled and by whatever agency it is run, good policy analysis considers all
of its benefits (advantages) and compares them with all of its costs (disadvantages).
Economists’ standard measure for assessing the nonfinancial benefits and costs of
a program is "willingness to pay": how much the beneficiaries of a program would be
willing to pay from their own resources for the advantage it generates for them, and how
much the people disadvantaged by that program would have to be paid to compensate
them for the disadvantages (see Cook and Ludwig, 2000 and the references cited therein;
Cohen et al., 2004; Nagin et al., 2006). For example, the merely financial losses to crime
victims (e.g., the value of stolen property, medical expenses, lost wages) do not exhaust
the social costs of crime and thus the benefits of crime control. Victims also experience
pain and suffering, and even persons not yet victimized incur costs to avoid crime (e.g.,
by staying indoors or by moving) and suffer anxiety about the risk of crime. Moreover,
the costs of crime-avoidance behaviors are not restricted to those who engage in them:
when a drug store restricts its hours or moves out of a neighborhood because of the
owner’s fear of crime, residents of that neighborhood lose both convenience as shoppers
and economic opportunity as potential employees. The relevant question, from a policymaker's perspective, is what a reduction in the risk of victimization is worth to those who
enjoy it: for example, how much more rent would a person be prepared to pay to live in a
lower crime neighborhood, all else being equal?
Different programs compete for scarce resources: dollars, staff, managerial and
political attention, and even office space. In allocating funds to increase desistance (or
for any other purpose), one can also ask which of the two or more programs makes the
greatest contribution to the specific goal for each dollar or other resource unit. This
analytic approach is known as cost effectiveness.
These two styles of analysis—cost benefit and cost effectiveness—do not exhaust
the full range of considerations that might go into the choice of public programs. For
example, they exclude any consideration of justice or fairness. Nonetheless, they both
provide useful guidance when the appropriate data are available and can serve as
conceptual frameworks for thinking about programs, even when, as is often the case,
those data are not available.
For example, current correctional budgets are highly skewed towards institutional
corrections (prisons and jails) in comparison with community corrections (probation and
parole). A cost-effectiveness analysis would ask how many crimes (weighted for
severity) could be prevented by adding $1 million to an institutional corrections budget
(enough to keep approximately 40 prisoners for an additional year) in comparison with
adding that same $1 million for more intensive community supervision (enough to
monitor 125 high-risk parolees in the community).
To consider the example, suppose that the average prisoner would have, if
released, five times the criminal activity rate (lambda) of the average high-risk
probationer and that doubling probation supervision would cut crime among high-risk
probationers by 10 percent. If the lambda of the high-risk probationer is x, incarceration
would prevent 40 (5x) crimes per year, or 200x crimes, while intensive probation
supervision would prevent 0.1 (1,000x) crimes per year, or 100x crimes. Thus, with the
stated assumptions, prison is more cost-effective as crime control than probation. But, if

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intensifying probation would cut crime among high-risk probationers by 30 percent,
intensive probation would be a more cost-effective use of that $1 million. It should be
noted that this analysis can be done without monetizing the costs of crime (the benefits of
crime control).3
In contrast, if the decision facing a lawmaker is whether to add $1 million to the
corrections budget, there is a different set of questions than those above. One would need
to know how much crime that sum would prevent, the value of that reduction to potential
victims, and the nonbudget costs and non-crime-reduction benefits associated with that
expenditure.
Assessing Programs
In thinking about how to assess desistance programs, it is critically important to
keep in mind the heterogeneity of the population of released offenders: from those who
have committed one nonviolent offense to those who may have served more than one
sentence in prison for multiple violent offenses. Programs that may work for one kind of
parolee may not work or even be appropriate to try for other groups. As but one example,
Pogarsky (2000) has argued that the threat of sanctions would be most ineffective on the
two extremes of the offending spectrum, that is, those who either have extremely high
self-control and those with very low self-control. Moreover, even for appropriate
programs, poor program implementation is often a barrier to both program effectiveness
and to program evaluation.
It is useful to think of the two obstacles (heterogeneity and implementation) in
terms of the “demand” and “supply” for rehabilitation. Limited demand, that is resistance
to change among parolees, limits what even the most carefully implemented program can
achieve, while limits on supply-- the state-of-the-art in providing rehabilitative services-puts a cap on what can be achieved even by programs aimed at parolees amenable to
change.
On the demand side, an important and often ignored dimension of heterogeneity
among released prisoners is first release. As noted in Chapter 1, inmates released from
their first prison sentence have lower recidivism rates than those released from prison for
the second, third, or fourth time. A recent study found that prisoners released for the first
time accumulated 18-25 percent fewer arrests during the first 3 years out of prison than
those who had been to prison and released at least once before—controlling for sex, age,
race, imprisonment offense, prior arrests, and time served (Rosenfeld, Wallman, and
Fornango, 2005). Over time, the fraction of released prisoners who are first-timers has
declined, while the fraction who have are being released from their second or other
incarceration has increased. This distinction is important (Tonry, 2004, p. 189):
. . . most people sent to prison, and hence released, will be persistent
offenders, and accordingly . . . on average people released from prison will
present relatively high risks for recidivism . . . . Is it not odd . . . that in our
3

By contrast with cost benefit analysis, cost effectiveness analysis necessarily ignores important
ancillary questions, such as the value to victims of having the perpetrators punished with incarceration
rather than probation or the damage to prisoners and their families from incarceration.

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time, we have forgotten the lower risk first-timers, and do not even think in
our research to ask separately about them [emphasis added]
By not distinguishing first-timers from the repeat offenders —who
have shown that they are more difficult candidates for reentry—supervision and
reentry programs may be doomed from the start. Approaches that work with the
first-timers may not work with the repeaters and so may seriously affect
assessment outcomes of desistance programs.

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3
Parole: Current Practice
Since the 1970s, the focus of parole supervision has shifted from the dual
purposes of making sure that parolees complied with their conditions of parole and aiding
their social reintegration by providing community resources (e.g., job training, drug
counseling) to a more direct emphasis on crime control. Parole agents increasingly
emphasize their police function and deemphasize the casework portion of their role
(Petersilia, 2003; Solomon et al., 2005); yet there is wide variation across agencies. This
chapter discusses the most recent evidence on the nature, costs, and effectiveness of
parole supervision and services for releasees in the community.
SUPERVISORY AGENCIES AND PERSONNEL
Supervision
Parole “supervision” is an unfortunate term because it means different things in
different parole settings. Although parolees’ behavior is sometimes closely monitored,
frequently it is not. An expansion of “intensive supervision parole” and the use of new
technologies, such as electronic monitoring and a global positioning system (GPS), have
occurred during the past 20 years as part of a broader movement to focus supervision and
treatment resources on those either the most likely to benefit or those in greatest danger
of recidivism (Petersilia, 2003). These approaches do enhance the capacity of officials to
monitor parolees; however, they are not used, and likely cannot be used, for most
parolees.
Supervision for many parolees consists of simply checking in with the parole agency.
Such checking in varies from mailing in a form to a parole officer, to a periodic phone
call to a clerical staff person, to a face-to-face visit with a parole agent. In a keynote
address before the Corrections Technology Association, the director of the New York
City Probation Services described that agency’s automated check-in procedure with
regard to probationers, most of whom never have been to prison (Horn, 2002, p. 3).
Several years ago, New York Probation pioneered the use of “reporting
kiosks,” which were touted in TECHBEAT as one of the most innovative uses of
technology in community corrections. In fact, today, 15,000 probationers, over
1/3 of my active caseload, “report” to a kiosk. What does this mean?
Probationers come to our downtown “fortress probation” offices where they wait
on long lines in overheated offices to stand in front of an ATM-like device, really
no more than a PC in a hardened case. Then, using a biometric hand scanner and
PIN their identity is verified and they respond on a touch screen to a series of
questions similar to those most often asked by probation officers. If all is in order
they are provided a receipt and a new date to come in.
For most parolees, on the other hand, supervision means check-ins, combined
with periodic field contacts by a parole agent with the parolee and his associates (called
collateral contacts). Field contacts range between once a week to once every few
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months. Petersilia (2006) reported that nearly one in four California parolees are
assigned to minimum supervision, meaning that they see a parole officer only twice a
year. Another 43 percent of parolees fall within the control services classification,
meaning that they will see a parole officer once every 6 weeks (Petersilia, 2001). For
other parolees, more frequent contact is most likely immediately after release or when
there are problems; less frequent contact is more likely with parolees who have long
periods left on a parole sentence and good, stable behavior. Field contacts take place at
the residence of parolees, their workplaces, or elsewhere. Ideally, these are surprise
visits, but this is not always possible.
The purpose of the contacts is to make sure that parolees are complying with their
conditions of parole. As noted above, parolees are expected to comply with a standard
set of conditions—do not violate any law, do not possess a firearm or illegal drugs, do not
associate with persons with criminal records, do not leave the jurisdiction, etc.—and
some parolees have additional conditions, such as required drug treatment, required
participation in other programs such as job training, and drug testing. Although some
contacts may essentially be counseling sessions, others may be conducted solely to insure
that the parolee is working regularly or to collect a urine sample for drug testing.
Collateral contacts may also be made with the police, family members, employers, social
service providers, school officials, or even neighbors. With check-in systems, parole
officers rely on collateral contacts to verify that parolees are complying with conditions
of release. The average parole caseload in the U.S. is 70 parolees to one parole officer.
Officers with caseloads under “intensive supervision” are responsible for fewer
parolees (about 30), allowing more frequent contacts on the assumption that closer
supervision will act as a greater deterrent because of the high likelihood of detecting
more violations. In addition to more frequent contacts, individuals subject to intensive
supervision parole frequently have special parole conditions (e.g., frequent drug testing,
therapeutic drug treatment, electronic monitoring). Some parolees are placed on
intensive supervision parole on the basis of a number of available classification schemes.
One is a Salient Factor Score, which is determined by an offender’s criminal history and
prison adjustment; another is the Client Management Classification System (for reviews,
see Harris et al., 2004; Lattimore, 2006). Other parolees may be assigned to intensive
supervision because of the severity of their most recent offense conviction or for
particular types of offenses.
The main objective of intensive supervision parole is a reduction in recidivism for
new crimes, but the available evidence suggests that this objective has not yet been
achieved. A rigorous study by Petersilia and Turner (1993) of intensive supervision
parole and probation programs in nine states, found that offenders in intensive
supervision programs had relatively the same number of subsequent arrests, but more
technical violations and returns to incarceration, than their non-intensive supervision
program counterparts. However, if those programs combined drug treatment, community
service, and employment programs with surveillance, recidivism rates were 10 to 20
percent lower than for those who did not participate in such activities. A meta-analysis of
intensive supervision probation and parole programs also found that
combining surveillance with treatment resulted in reduced recidivism (Gendreau and
Little, 1993).

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Electronic monitoring is used in some jurisdictions to complement or in lieu of
traditional parole supervision. If a parolee leaves the area to which he or she is restricted,
a signal is sent to a monitoring office or computer system. Again, in contrast to
expectations and general belief, research shows that individuals on probation with
electronic monitoring are no more or less likely to experience new arrests than those
under standard supervision (Finn and Muirhead-Steves, 2002). Whether this would be the
case with parolees is an empirical question.
Intensive supervision parole, with or without electronic monitoring, is more
expensive than traditional parole supervision: about $8,000 and $5,000, respectively, per
year (Petersilia, 2003), compared to about $2,000 for traditional supervision. Yet the
annual cost of intensive supervision and electronic monitoring are less than the cost of
prison, which averages $23,397 per year per prisoner in the United States (Petersilia,
2006). Conceptually, electronic monitoring could be expected to enhance enforcement of
stay away orders, curfews and participation in social services and could enable the
monitoring of many other conditions for release to the community.
Caseloads
A belief that smaller caseloads would lead to less offending dates back at least to
1973, when the President’s Commission on Law Enforcement and the Administration of
Justice (1973) recommended that parole and probation caseloads not exceed 35
individuals. During the early 1970s, the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and
Welfare (now the Department of Health and Human Services) provided support to reduce
some specialized caseloads (welfare recipients and parolees with alcohol and drug
dependencies) to 25. Today, the increased size of the prison population, with consequent
increases in the number of releasees returning to communities, and unchanged levels of
funding for parole services, have led to caseloads that are often at 70 or higher (Petersilia,
2001).1
Although caseload size has not been shown to affect recidivism among parolees,
one can assume that caseload sizes are not limitless: neither effective supervision nor
treatment is as likely when the number of persons being supervised overwhelms the
capacity of parole officers and agents. Although the argument for focusing resources
simply on caseload size has not been supported, it is possible that very large caseloads
diminish the effectiveness of other strategies. Moreover, it has been shown that caseload
size is a significant factor in determining how parole officers deliver services and how
they experience their jobs (Quinn and Gould, 2003). It is likely that the quality of
assessment and classification and the effectiveness of social services and treatments
provided are more important than the size of caseloads. With this in mind, the American
Probation and Parole Association has recommended a workload model in determining the

1

For comparison, probation caseloads are frequently much higher, exceeding 200 or even 300 in
some jurisdictions. Although on average probationers have committed less serious offences than parolees,
this is not always true: probationers may include people convicted of such serious offenses as robbery,
assault, domestic violence and drug-related crimes. Many are in need of significant treatment or intensive
supervision.

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size of caseloads (see Caseload standards at www.appa-net.org/
ccheadlines/docs/caseloads_standards_pp_0906.pdf accessed 07-03-07).
Parole Agencies’ Missions
Community protection is a common goal of parole agents, but the route to this
objective varies. At one extreme are agencies that define the primary goal of parole
supervision as surveillance and the control and regulation of their clients’ behavior. At
the other extreme are agencies that attempt to protect the public by providing the
treatment and reintegration services that are believed to promote desistance. Obviously,
most parole agencies lie on a continuum between these extremes; specific offices and
individual parole agents define their responsibilities at various places along this
continuum. Agents are influenced by the culture of their offices, which can change over
time. The culture of parole agencies is an important factor in how parole supervision is
carried out (McCleary, 1992)
The overall shift towards a crime control model of parole in recent decades and
variations across agencies in how they define their mission create a challenge for some
reforms when they do not align with an agency, an office, or agents’ cultures. For
example, if a new treatment regime is tried in an agency that is primarily focused on
surveillance, parole agents may be less likely to implement the treatment as the treatment
designers and even their supervisors intend.
Parole Agents: Conflicting Missions
Variations in agency mission and culture—as well as in the fundamental role of
parole itself--point to the conflict for parole agents: they don’t know whether they are
expected to be law enforcement agents or social caseworkers. They have responsibility
for enforcing the law and the conditions of parole, as well as assisting in released
offenders’ reintegration in society. In part, the resolution of this conflict in favor of
enforcement has been driven by heinous events—such as sexual assault, as in the Willie
Horton case, or the rape and murder of a child, as in the Polly Klass and Megan Kanka
cases. Media coverage of these kinds of crimes, the crime victims’ movement which
took off in the early 1980s, and the war on drugs have all fueled a trend toward
punitiveness. The cost of strict enforcement, whether warranted or not, is borne only by
the parolee. The cost of failing to clamp down on a dangerous parolee is borne by an
entire agency or, as in the Willie Horton case, a governor. Consequently, agencies have
been hard pressed to emphasize rehabilitation or take the process of relapse into account.
The agents who emphasize the supervision role typically think of themselves as,
and act like, corrections officers whose job is to maintain control of their charges. Theirs
is a workday of surveillance, investigation, and enforcement. The agents who emphasize
the casework side of the role tend to define the parolees on their caseloads as clients in
need of problem diagnostics and appropriate services. The conflict is that nearly all
parole officers are called on by their employers to do both. They sometimes find
themselves derided as “detective lite” by law enforcement colleagues and chided for
being a “social worker with a gun” by social workers and other treatment professionals.

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In some jurisdictions these conflicts have been minimized by changing the
institutional positioning of the parole functions. Some jurisdictions have turned to or
partnered with law enforcement to buttress the supervision of parolees. The Washington
State Department of Corrections, in its neighborhood corrections initiative, has assigned
corrections officers to ride with police in what is known on the streets of Seattle as the
“jump out van.”2 The teams proactively patrol the streets, working exclusively in
transient, urban and homeless areas to provide an unparalleled level of supervision of
releasees and a bridge to services ranging from drug treatment and housing to socks,
food, water, and shelter (Northwest Law Enforcement and Public Safety Training
Conference, 2006).
While parole (and probation) officers formerly were drawn heavily from the ranks
of retired police officers, they are now usually college graduates who define themselves
as professional parole (or probation) officers. Starting salaries are similar to those for
public school teachers and, as in teaching, their supervisors worry about burnout.
Working conditions for parole agents can be difficult: large caseloads, less than agreeable
clients, a lot of time in the least desirable parts of communities, and plenty of blame when
a parolee commits a new crime.
Police and Parole Supervision
Parole officers and local police agencies have long had close informal working
relationships. In some jurisdictions the police are routinely notified when a person is
released on parole in their area. Many parole officers regularly scan the arrest logs of
police departments to see if parolees on their caseloads were picked up. Historically, this
task was simply defined as doing the job.
More recently, more formalized partnerships between parole and probation
agencies and police departments have sometimes been set up. As a retired chief
probation officer noted (Burrell, 2005 [need p. number for quote]):
Ironically, line officers have been collaborating for years—with police officers,
drug counselors, teachers, psychologists, employment specialists and others—
who were also involved with their clients. The critical difference today is that
these partnerships are forged at a higher level and are more formal.
The Urban Institute recently published an excellent report summarizing several ongoing
law enforcement programs designed to positively affect prisoner reentry (Lavigne,
Solomon, Beckman, and Dedel, 2006).
While parole officers in some agencies may arrest individuals, particularly for
non-criminal violations of specific parole conditions, other officers may elect to have
sworn police officers make such arrests, and some agencies require it. Federal probation
and parole officers are, by policy, directed not to execute warrants (U. S. Parole
Commission, 1995).

2

Washington has abolished traditional parole although there is intensive supervision for some
released offenders.
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RULES FOR RELEASEES
The goal of parole supervision (or other forms of supervised release) is to enable
and require prison releasees to live law-abiding lives in the community. As just
discussed, both services and supervision are part of parole. Supervision includes rules,
and rules necessarily have sanctions for violations. A key question in enforcing rules in
any situation is the role of incentives and disincentives: What is the proper balance
between incentives to reward good behavior and sanctions to punish bad behavior?
Since the ultimate goal of parole supervision is to prevent releasees from committing new
offenses, the rules of parole should be demonstrably linked to reducing the risk of new
offenses. Unfortunately, we know little from research about whether rules of parole are
linked to less offending (Solomon et al., 2005).
A major issue in parole involves violations of the specific conditions of parole
(the parole contract) that do not involve criminal offenses. Such violations include
meeting with known felons, missing a check-in or meeting with a parole agent, being out
after a curfew time, and missing a scheduled drug test. One view is that such violations
should not have major consequences, such as return to prison. In this view, unless there
is a pattern of violations or absconding from supervision that signals a releasee's refusal
to take the supervision relationship seriously, parole sanctions need not, and in general
should not, involve revocation of parole and return to prison. (This approach does not
involve conduct that would be prosecuted if committed by an ordinary citizen, though
presumably that would be a new offense.) The underlying assumption of this approach is
that less drastic sanctions, if delivered quickly and predictably, can control a parolee’s
behavior and enhance the prospects for long-term success.
The contrary view is that some violations, even of a procedural nature, are
significant signs that a parolee is not respecting the terms of the parole contract—is not
attempting to live as a law-abiding citizen—and so should suffer major consequences.
This can be characterized as analogous to the “broken windows” approach to law
enforcement, because it rests on the assumption that minor violations, if left unattended,
can lead to more serious ones (Wilson and Kelling, 1982; Farabee, 2006).
Tracking violations can be complex because of large caseloads. Many parolees
meet with their parole officer on an infrequent basis, so detection of violations may seem
almost random. But officers have broad discretion in most cases in the way they
supervise their caseloads. They can give specific parolees that worry them more
attention. Research indicates that parolees who are more closely supervised have higher
violation rates .
Many behaviors that involve compliance with the rules of parole can be the
subject of the supervision process. Abstinence from illicit drug use can be monitored by
chemical testing. For releasees with established drug problems, testing can be frequent
enough (i.e., twice a week) to leave little or no window for undetected drug use. At that
frequency, tests can be scheduled in advance, making them less disruptive to parolees'
lives. Parolees without known drug problems and those who have proven their ability to
refrain from drug use by a long series of negative tests can be monitored by random
testing. These approaches are in contrast to the practice of infrequent testing on
announced dates, which can be virtually an open invitation to use drugs other than in the
few days before the scheduled test. For those parolees subject to frequent testing, the

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efficacy of the threat of sanctions in reducing drug use is greatly enhanced by the use of
testing methods that provide on-the-spot results. Other parole rules—such as curfews,
stay-away orders, and requirements to appear at work or for treatment—can verified by
electronic monitoring.
The level of contentiousness that sometimes characterizes this debate over
violating specified conditions of parole may be lessened by combining realistic and
enforceable release conditions with graduated incentives and consequences (i.e.,
graduated responses). For example, Andrews and Bonta (1998) and Taxman (2006)
specifically discuss the importance of using rewards in the process as a means of
encouraging compliance with program requirements.
Positive incentives for compliance are important complements to sanctions for
violations. Less intrusive supervision and the remission of previously collected fines are
both likely to be valued by releasees, but a wide variety of rewards, such as tickets to
sporting events, may also have a role. The benefits of even small reductions in
recidivism can easily cover the costs of such rewards; the greater challenge may be in
devising the rewards and justifying them to policy makers and the public.

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4
Services and Programs for Releasees
Recent research on desistance from crime has generated a body of knowledge that
examines the underlying conditions that lead to less frequent or a declining rate towards
zero offending; yet programs and services for parolees are, in general, not based on these
findings, but are instead rooted in the research on individual behavioral change. Farrall
and Maruna (2004) have noted that only recently have there been attempts to link
findings from desistance studies with evaluations of offender management programs and
policies. Part of the problem is that both theory development and research on the
mechanisms underlying desistance are limited. We do not know, for example, how
individual change and social circumstances such as marriage or work interact to produce
desistance.
Because the committee believes these unexplored issues are important, we try to
provide something of a baseline of information about these linkages by organizing parts
of this chapter on programs and services for releases in a desistance framework. For
example, in a longitudinal study on probation and desistance (Farrall, 2002), the
researchers found employment and family relationship experiences were more critical to
successful desistance than differences in probation practice. The desistance literature on
parolees has found similar results, though the reasons for them are poorly understood.
Using a desistance framework makes it possible to focus on the purpose of the
intervention rather than on offending and allows consideration of the broader context
required to support behavioral change (Farrall and Maruna, 2004). Although the
disconnect between these literatures may make this framework seem forced at times, we
believe it fosters the development of a more coherent structure for future research and
policy development.
There is an overlap between conditions that promote desistance and the individual
effects of change but it is not clear where that intersection lies. Does individual change
provide a basis for employment and a stable marriage, or do a stable marriage and a job
provide the context for individual change? Intervention research has shown that the most
successful programs fostering individual change and leading to desistance are those that
start in prison and then continue in the community setting once an individual is released.
The chapter begins with a review of research findings on interventions that are
offered either before or after release from prison, organized in a desistance framework
that includes education and employment, marriage, drug treatment, and individual
change. This is followed by a section on current innovations in reentry programming,
including prerelease planning and the consequences of early failure. The third section
considers available services and their effects, including physical and mental health
services, mentoring programs, and best practices.

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RESEARCH ON PROGRAMS
Education and Employment
In the United States, adult corrections facilities have a long history of providing
education and vocational training as part of the rehabilitation process (Piehl, 1998; Gaes
et al., 1999), based on the belief that improving education and job skills will promote
desistance. However, participation in these programs has been declining since the early
1990s: among soon-to-be-released prisoners in 1991, 42 percent reported participating in
education programs and 31 percent in vocational programs; in 1997 the figures were 35
percent and 27 percent, respectively (Lynch and Sabol, 2001). The reasons for these
declines include the rapid growth in the prison population, decreased state and federal
funding for in-prison programs, the frequent transfers of prisoners from one facility to
another, and greater interest in short-term programs, such as substance abuse and
cognitive-behavioral programs (Lawrence et al., 2002).
Some studies show that recidivism rates are significantly lower for releasees with
more education (MacKenzie, 2006; Adams et al., 1994; Boudin, 1993; Harer, 1995;
Stillman, 1999, Fabelo, 2000). Moreover, comprehensive reviews of dozens of
individual program evaluations generally conclude that adult academic and vocational
programs lead to reduced recidivism (MacKenzie, 2006) and increased employment of 510 percent (Gerber and Fritsch, 1994; Gaes et al., 1999; Cullen and Gendreau, 2000;
Wilson and Gallagher, 2000; Aos et al., 2006). However, the majority of the evaluations
are of poor quality, and a close examination of their methodological problems reduces
confidence in their results (MacKenzie, 2006; Wilson and Gallagher, 2000)
For correctional education programming to be successful, it must be part of a
systematic approach that includes programs for employability, social skills training, and
other specialized programming (Taxman et al., 1998). Best-practice correctional
education programs are both carefully tailored to individual prisoners and related to
vocational and job skills training. Education and job training for prisoners who were low
earners are most successful when they provide workers with credentials that meet privatesector demands. Programs that provide training, a range of services and supports,
incentives, and access to better employers work well, especially when there are strong
incentives for releasees to get jobs (Holzer and Martinson, 2005; Visher and Courtney,
2006).
To be most effective, inmate screening, needs assessment, and the provision of
services need to be integrated, but this approach may run counter to other institutional
priorities. In many systems, security classification takes precedence over other activities,
which may affect the organization of and availability of services. Many prisoners would
like to enroll in education and training programs but slots are not available or they are not
eligible because of their security status or short sentence length. If the highest need
prisoners are also the highest risk offenders, it might make sense to shift some
programming resources to higher security institutions where such prisoners are
concentrated (Logan, 1993).

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As noted above, work is a primary feature of successful reintegration and
desistance (Sampson and Laub, 1990, 1993; Nagin and Waldfogel, 1998). The time
spent and connections made at work probably serve as informal social controls that
prevent criminal behavior. Having a job, especially a good job, reduces the economic
incentive for criminal behavior. For example, using data from the 1980 National
Longitudinal Survey of Youth, economist Jeffrey Grogger (1998) has estimated that the
elasticity of crime participation with respect to wages is –1.0, two and a half times higher
than the elasticity provided by incarceration.1 Specifically he found that a 10 percent
increase in wages would reduce crime participation by 6–9 percent. His estimates suggest
that young’s men’s behavior is very responsive to price incentives and that falling real
wages for youth may have been partially responsible for the rise in youth crime during
the 1980s and early 1990s.
Finding employment is one of the most pressing problems that releasees face.
Although two-thirds of former prisoners were working prior to their imprisonment
(Bureau of Justice Statistics, 1993), their educational level, work experience, and skills
are well below national averages for the general population (Andrews and Bonta, 1994;
Petersilia, 2005). Moreover, the stigma and legal restrictions associated with
incarceration often make it difficult for ex-prisoners to secure employment (Holzer et al.,
2002; Bushway and Reuter, 2002). When releasees do find jobs, they tend to earn less
than employees with similar background characteristics who have not been in prison
(Bushway and Reuter, 2002). Thus, research supports a strong programmatic emphasis
on increasing prisoners’ and releasees’ employability, through skills training, job
readiness, and, possibly, work-release programs during incarceration and after release.
The U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) has a long history of evaluating
community-based work programs for former prisoners and people with criminal records,
beginning with several large evaluations of job training and financial support for former
prisoners in the 1970s. The LIFE and TARP studies conducted in the 1970s are well
known (see Bank et al., 1980). These programs offered ex-offenders varying levels of
unemployment compensation and job placement assistance. Random assignment studies
in Texas, Georgia, and Baltimore found that income supports reduced property crimes
although they also created a disincentive for ex-offenders to find employment (Berk et
al., 1980).
Other DOL-funded job training initiatives that included ex-offenders were the
National Supported Work Demonstration, Job Corps, JobStart, and the Job Training
Partnership Act. More recently, DOL has funded faith- or other community-based
organizations in 30 sites under the Prisoner Reentry Initiative for employment services
and job placements, specifically for clients with nonviolent histories (with varying
definitions by site) who are under the supervision of the criminal justice system.
The most recent random assignment study, initiated in 1994, evaluated the
Opportunity to Succeed Program, which delivered employment services within a set of
comprehensive services for drug-using former prisoners. The study found that
participants were more likely to be employed full time in the year after release, and they
reported less drug use; however, self-reports of arrests and official record measures of

1

Elasticity is the ratio of the proportional change in one variable with respect to proportional
change in another variable.
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recidivism showed no differences between participants and controls (Rossman and
Roman, 2003).
A meta-analysis that examined the effects of employment training and job
assistance in the community for ex-offenders concluded that such programs are
responsible for a modest, but significant, 5 percent reduction in recidivism (Aos et al.,
2006). However, another meta-analysis, using a very similar, but not identical, set of
studies and methods, concluded that community-based employment programs do not
significantly reduce recidivism for ex-offenders (Visher et al., 2005).2 Thus, although
work programs can have a significant effect on the employment and recidivism rates of
male releasees (Bushway and Reuter, 2001), the effect sizes may be small.
Current job assistance and training programs for former prisoners—such as the
Center for Employment Opportunities (New York), Safer Foundation (Chicago), and
Project Rio (Texas)—are more comprehensive than earlier employment programs for exoffenders, incorporating other transitional services and reentry support though
maintaining a primary focus on job placement (Buck, 2000). The effects of these
comprehensive, employment-focused programs on ex-offenders’ employment and
recidivism rates are not yet known; several well-designed evaluations are under way.
Marriage and Family Support Programs
For the general population, research has documented the benefits of marriage for
adults and their children (see Chapter 2; Waite and Gallagher, 2000; Lerman, 2002). A
recent study concluded that marriage is a “potentially transformative institution that may
assist in promoting desistance from criminal behavior” (Sampson, Laub, and Wimer,
2006, p. 500). Thus, it makes sense to ask whether former prisoners would benefit from
marriage and family support programs.
Most people in prisons are men, and most of them are fathers. A majority of state
and federal male prisoners have at least one child under 18, on average 8 years old
(Mumola, 2000). About one-third of the fathers lived with their children just before
arrest, and most also lived with the child’s mother. Some who did not live with their
children saw them regularly and contributed to their upbringing (Hairston, 2002). Over
one-half of incarcerated parents have been married, and about 23 percent are married
when they are in prison (Mumola, 2000).
In addition to the role of marriage in contributing to desistance, a significant body
of research shows positive effects of family support on a variety of reentry outcomes.
Greater contact with family during incarceration (by mail, phone, or in-person visits) is
associated with lower recidivism rates (Adams and Fischer, 1976; Glaser, 1969; Hairston,
2002). Prisoners with close family ties have lower recidivism rates than those without
such attachments (La Vigne et al., 2004; Sullivan et al., 2002). Strong family
attachments may keep ex-offenders away from peers who encourage criminal behavior
(Warr, 1998). Emotional and financial family support is associated with better
2

The reason for these differences is not clear, but is probably due to a slightly different mix of
studies. In addition, Visher and her colleagues included only randomized clinical trials in their analysis,
while Amos and his colleagues included matched designs.

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employment and the avoidance of illegal substance use (La Vigne et al., 2004; Visher et
al. 2003; Nelson et al., 1999; Sullivan et al., 2002). Fathers who report strong
attachments to their children have higher employment and lower depression rates after
release (Visher, Naser, and Courtney, 2007). Family support is associated with better
results concerning depression and prosocial identity (Ekland-Olson et al., 1983; Uggen
and Behrens, 2004; Laub and Sampson, 2003).
Prison-based programs generally offer parenting education, counseling and
support groups, and services to facilitate visitation. Community-based programs usually
include counseling, mentoring, assistance with family reunification and rebuilding,
continuing parenting education, and family support groups. However, support services
specifically focused on marriage and family for prisoners and former prisoners are
limited and generally have not directly addressed nonmarital couple relationships. Some
programs provide family strengthening services that may affect couples, but indirectly,
by attempting to help fathers to be less of a burden to their families, to strengthen the
father-child bond, and to avoid behaviors that stress relationships. Other programs focus
on family relationships more generally. Programs funded as part of the federal Serious
and Violent Offender Reentry Initiative (SVORI) offer general family strengthening
services, but only 8 of the 50 adult programs ranked it as one of their top three priorities
(see www.svori-evaluation.org [June, 2007]).
Unfortunately, few intervention studies have examined the role of marriage and
family support programs in desistance. An exception is La Bodega de Familia , a wellknown family-focused reentry program for former prisoners developed in New York
City. The program uses comprehensive family case management as a mechanism for
working with releasees and people on probation, families, and the community to create a
web of support. Comprehensive family case management uses a strengths-based, clientdriven approach to help clients and family members navigate service delivery systems
and agencies to access treatment and services, maintain employment, tap existing
networks for support, and create long-term family well-being and community safety
(Shapiro, 2003). An evaluation of the program demonstrated that focusing on returning
former prisoners together with their families, and emphasizing the strengths of each unit
in addition to addressing the deficits, successfully decreased illegal drug use without
additional treatment, reduced new arrests, and increased overall physical and mental
health (Sullivan et al., 2002). One negative outcome was that the clients (former
prisoners and their families) reported increased conflict in their family relationships.
In 2006 the Department of Health and Human Services initiated a demonstration
program designed to promote two-parent families and marriage, with a special focus on
incarcerated fathers. Ten sites were chosen for an in-depth process and outcome
evaluation; where possible, couples will be randomly assigned to the demonstration
program or another set of services (See
www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/ofa/hmabstracts/summary.htm [March 2006]). When the
evaluation is completed, this highly innovative program may offer insights into the
relationship between marriage-strengthening programs and successful reentry of
releasees. However, given the research on the important role of nonmarital family
support after release, demonstration programs are also needed to identify the types of
programs and services that would be most effective in promoting desistance.

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Behavior Management
The desistance literature points to individual motivation to change as a key
correlate of reduced offending (Maruna, 2001; other cite?). Behavior management
therapies in correctional programming seek to help individuals understand the basis for
their negative behavior and correct their faulty perceptions of themselves, their
environment, or both. These therapies provide individuals with skills they can use to
monitor their thoughts and correct their behaviors in daily situations, ultimately leading
to significant changes in behavior. Behavior management is an umbrella approach that
includes contingency management (relapse prevention), social learning, and moral
reasoning techniques. In relapse prevention, clients are guided to evaluate situations that
may lead to a relapse of illegal behavior and then plan for how to either avoid or cope
with them effectively.
The most widely recognized behavior management approach to change is
cognitive-behavioral therapy or treatment. In the criminal justice field, it is a problemfocused method designed to help people identify the dysfunctional beliefs, thoughts, and
patterns of behavior that contribute to their problems and provide them with the skills
they need to modify those behaviors, prevent relapse into those behaviors, and maintain
successful behavior (Taxman, 2006). This approach also addresses individuals’ readiness
and motivation to change by engaging them in self-assessment and the development of
treatment goals. The underlying theory of cognitive-behavioral treatment is that behavior
is learned, and mechanisms for learning new behaviors must be in place in order for the
environment to be part of the change process (Taxman, 2006). It combines two kinds of
approaches—cognitive therapy and behavioral therapy.
Cognitive therapy concentrates on thoughts, assumptions, and beliefs. Through
cognitive therapy, individuals are encouraged to recognize and change faulty or
maladaptive thinking patterns that lead to negative behavior. Cognitive therapy enables
individuals to gain control over inappropriate repetitive thoughts that often feed or trigger
various presenting problems (Beck, 1995). Behavior therapy concentrates on external
factors, addressing the specific actions and environments that either change or maintain
behaviors (Skinner, 1974; Bandura, 1977). For instance, people who are trying to stop
smoking are often encouraged to change their routine habits: instead of having their daily
coffee when waking—which may trigger the urge to have a cigarette—they are
encouraged to take a morning walk. Replacing negative behaviors with positive
behaviors is a well-known strategy to help change behaviors, particularly when the new
behavior is reinforced.
Cognitive-behavioral approaches have often been used in correctional programs
that target substance use and its associated problems. The theory is that substance use is
a learned behavior that is initiated and maintained in the context of environmental factors
(Waldron and Kaminer, 2004). Programs built on this premise concentrate on helping
people anticipate and avoid high-risk situations as a means to facilitate abstinence.
Techniques used to facilitate change include identifying the circumstances surrounding
use, learning strategies to manage urges and cravings, and remembering to engage in
positive behaviors (Kaminer, 2004).
The combination of cognitive therapy and behavioral therapy has been successful,
especially among young people, in forestalling the onset, ameliorating the severity, and

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diverting the long-term consequences of behaviors associated with delinquency, crime,
and violence. Research consistently shows that cognitive-behavioral therapy is
associated with significant and clinically meaningful positive changes, particularly when
therapy is provided by experienced practitioners (Landenberger and Lipsey, 2006;
Waldron and Kaminer, 2004). Four problem behaviors have been particularly amenable
to change with this approach: (1) violence and criminality, (2) substance use and abuse,
(3) teenage pregnancy and risky sexual behaviors, and (4) school failure. Cognitivebehavioral therapy has been successfully applied across settings (e.g., schools, support
groups, prisons, treatment agencies, community-based organizations, and churches) and
across ages and roles (e.g., students, parents, teachers). It has also been shown to be
relevant to people with differing abilities and from diverse backgrounds.
Meta-analyses of programs designed for criminal offenders have shown
cognitive-behavioral programs to be very effective in reducing recidivism rates, most
notably among higher risk, hard-to-reach offenders (Little, 2005; Lipsey, Chapman, and
Landenberger, 2001; Landenberger and Lipsey, 2006).3 On average, the therapy reduced
the recidivism rates of a general offender population by 27 percent. Interestingly, in a
study of prisoners who received cognitive-behavioral treatment either through
participation in programs with high-quality implementation (e.g., research and
demonstration projects) or in routine correctional practice, those in the former group
experienced higher reductions in recidivism rates after release (49% on average) than the
latter group (11% on average). The largest effects on recidivism were seen for higher
risk offenders who received treatment from providers with at least moderate training in
cognitive-behavioral therapy and as part of research and demonstration projects. For this
group, recidivism rates were reduced by nearly 60 percent. Overall, however,
Landenberger and Lipsey (2006) found no difference in the effectiveness of various
“brand name” programs of cognitive-behavioral therapy in comparison with generic
forms of the therapy.
In their latest review of the evidence from 291 rigorous evaluations of adult
corrections programs throughout the United States and other English- speaking countries,
Aos et al. (2006) found that programs for the general offender population that use
cognitive-behavioral treatment significantly reduced recidivism by an average of 8.2
percent compared with treatment as usual.4 That is, without the cognitive behavioral
approach 49 percent of offenders will recidivate, and with cognitive behavioral treatment,
45 percent of offenders will recidivate, a reduction of 8.2 percent in the recidivism rate.
Prison-based drug treatment programs that use cognitive-behavioral approaches have
been found to reduce recidivism by nearly 7 percent (Aos et al., 2006, Exhibit 1).
Finally, cognitive-behavioral treatment programs have also been shown to be costeffective, yielding $2.54 to $11.48 for every program dollar invested in comparison with
punishment-oriented interventions, which have yielded returns of only 50 to 75 cents for
every program dollar (Aos et al., 2001).

3

The Landenberger and Lipsky (2006) meta-analysis is particularly notable because it included
only studies that used random control designs.
4
As with the other meta-analysis, there were no significant differences in outcome between the
“brand name” and generic forms of treatment.
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Treatment for Drug-Involved Offenders
Illegal drugs are related to crime in multiple ways, and the connection between
drug use and crime has been well established in the research literature. According to the
Bureau of Justice Statistics (1998), 31 percent of crime victims reported that their
assailants were under the influence of drugs or alcohol. In 2005 approximately 20
percent of state prison inmates and 55 percent of federal prison inmates were incarcerated
for a drug related offense, and among state prisoners, three-fourths had some type of
involvement with drug or alcohol abuse prior to their incarceration.
Substance use among former prisoners presents significant challenges to their
reentry. Only 15 percent of offenders involved with drugs and alcohol abuse received
treatment in prison (Karburg and James, 2005). Serious drug use problems—involving
daily or weekly use--likely affects about one-third to one-half of all drug-abusing
offenders. Forty-one percent of men released from Maryland prisons and returning to
Baltimore reported using heroin daily in the 6 months before their incarceration; about 33
percent of men released from Illinois prisons reported weekly illicit drug use before
incarceration (Visher et al., 2004; Visher et al., 2003). Because chronic drug abuse alters
the brain chemistry in people addicted to heroin, cocaine, and even nicotine, they are at
higher risk of relapse to use even after long periods of abstinence (National Institute on
Drug Abuse, 2006). In addition, releasees who are substance users also have high rates
of other mental health problems, so they may need integrated drug and psychiatric
treatment (Compton, Cottler, Jacobs, Behabdallah, and Spitznagel,
2003). Such treatment may need to be relatively prolonged, because research has shown
that multiple episodes of treatment may be required to help substance users maintain
abstinence over time (National Institute on Drug Abuse, 2006).
A comprehensive assessment is the first step in developing a treatment regimen,
and tailoring individualized services is an important component of drug abuse treatment
for criminal justice populations (National Institute on Drug Abuse, 2006). The three
primary treatment approaches for drug-abusing offenders are therapeutic communities,
outpatient treatment, and “12-step” programs. Therapeutic communities are intensive
programs that typically have stand-alone custodial units and use a hierarchical model
with treatment stages that reflect increased levels of personal and social responsibility.
Outpatient treatment involves counseling by certified drug treatment specialists and often
includes pharmacotherapy. And 12-step programs are organized by peers, such as
Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) and Narcotics Anonymous (NA).
It is widely believed that in-prison drug treatment for offenders leads to
reductions in drug use and subsequent criminal behavior and to better outcomes in other
areas, such as employment. However, there are few rigorous evaluations of in-prison
drug treatment programs. Evaluations of the three most well-known model programs—
Key/Crest (Delaware), the Amity therapeutic prison (California), and Kyle New Vision
(Texas)—suffer from several methodological shortcomings, including noncomparable
treatment and control groups, inadequate controls for selection bias, and poor outcome
measures (Pearson and Lipton, 1999; Gaes et al., 1999). This lack of high-quality
evaluations is especially troubling in light of congressional appropriations of more than

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$450 million to states in the last decade to establish residential substance abuse treatment
programs in correctional institutions.
Unfortunately, even for the small group of individuals who have access to and
take advantage of treatment programs in prison, available evidence suggests that fewer
continue to receive such community-based treatment after release (Winterfield and
Castro, 2005). In an analysis that examined the extent to which correctional treatment
was matched to individual needs, a recent study of prisoners with drug problems found
that only 58 percent of those who either had objective indicators of serious drug use or
indicated a need for drug treatment received in-prison drug treatment (including
Alcoholics Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymous) (Winterfield and Castro, 2005).
A recent meta-analysis of correctional programs concluded that drug-treatment
programs reduce recidivism: the reduction is about 5 percent for releasees who received
only in-prison treatment and 12 percent for releasees who received both in-prison and
community treatment (Aos et al., 2006). An earlier study showed that some offenders
may benefit from diversion into treatment, but others may require intensive monitoring
with the threat of criminal justice sanctions (Marlowe, 2003).
Offenders who complete prison-based treatment and continue with treatment in
the community have the best outcomes (National Institute on Drug Abuse, 2006; Gaes et
al., 1999; Harrison and Beck, 2006). Continuing drug abuse treatment in the community
is believed to be necessary to help new releasees deal with problems that only become
salient at reentry, such as learning to handle situations that could lead to relapse, learning
how to live drug free, and developing a drug-free peer support network. Moreover, better
outcomes are also associated with treatment that lasts longer than 90 days, and studies
have shown that legal pressure can improve retention rates (National Institute on Drug
Abuse, 2006).
Increasingly, medications are an important part of treatment for serious drug
abusers with long histories; those medications include methadone, buprenorphine,
topiramate, and naltrexone (National Institute on Drug Abuse, 2006; Witten, 2006).
Although these medications may not be appropriate for all drug-using offenders, the
criminal justice system has been slow to embrace these approaches, and most parolees
and other ex-offenders who are under criminal justice supervision in the community are
not offered this type of treatment.5 Yet postrelease monitoring of drug use through
urinalysis or other objective methods, as part of criminal justice supervision, has been
found to reduce both relapses of drug use and criminal behavior (Taxman, 2006).
Ongoing coordination between treatment providers and courts or supervision officers is
required to address the needs of the drug-abusing releasees (Marlowe, 2003), but
collaboration and communication between the treatment and community criminal justice
supervision systems have been limited to date.
In summary, although sustained abstinence is associated with substantial
reductions in crime (perhaps 50 percent or more), only a small percentage of drugabusing offenders receive appropriate treatment for the length of time necessary to
achieve these outcomes (Harrell and Roman, 2001; Marlowe, 2002). Best practice would
call for better targeted in-prison treatment for substance-using offenders, better
coordination between in-prison and postrelease treatment providers, and better joint
5

A few adult drug courts do include medication-based treatment (see below and Chapter 5).

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community case management between the criminal justice system and community
treatment providers.
REENTRY PROGRAMMING
In addition to the effects of improved access to appropriate drug treatment
programs, jobs and job training, and family support services, reentry programming shows
promise in addressing issues and situations that may cause offenders to cycle in and out
of prison. Reentry services and programs for releasees focus on immediate needs, such
as developing an individualized plan for the first few weeks and months after release;
working with a case manager in the community; meeting housing, physical health, and
mental health needs; and providing mentoring programs for support.
Planning Prior to Release
Released prisoners face enormous challenges, from finding jobs and housing to
staying sober to avoiding high-risk persons and places. One key to successful reentry is
identifying the challenges prior to release and developing tailored reentry plans that
identify appropriate services. Research emphasizes the importance of conducting
detailed needs assessments shortly before release and periodically after release to develop
appropriate individualized services. Because it is widely agreed that not every offender
needs the same level and type of service and sanction and that offenders differ on their
likelihood to reoffend once released back into the community (Andrews and Bonta, 1998;
Weibush et al., 2000; Weibush, 2003), such assessments are the foundation for an
individualized reentry plan.
An individualized reentry plan not only specifies what services and supervision
level are appropriate for each releasee, but also specifies what documents, medications,
or other immediate transition preparation a releasee may need. An individualized plan
for a releasee then connects to individualized and unified case planning and management.
The ideal case management approach incorporates a family and social network
perspective, a mix of surveillance and services that takes account of a releasee’s risk and
protective factors, and realistic and enforceable release conditions that are connected with
graduated incentives and consequences (i.e., graduated responses, discussed in Chapter
3). It also relies on community service providers and resources and other supportive
community organizations (Jenkins et al., 1993; see http://nicic.org/Library/011018). The
importance of developing these reentry plans to enable people to succeed once they have
been released has been described by Petersilia (2003) and Healy (1999). Unfortunately,
such individualized reentry plans are not yet standard operating practice prior to release,
largely because of lack of resources to fund staff to prepare them.
Early Failure and Its Consequences
When they leave prison, releasees most immediately need transitional services.
Transitional services include photo identifications, appropriate clothes, housing, access to
transportation, and, if they are eligible, getting signed up for public assistance.
Unfortunately, these kinds of immediate needs are often not addressed before release, and

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it falls to family and friends to help arrange them for new releasees. In fact, most
postrelease programs are not available to releasees in the first few days after release.
This lack of immediately available services has been shown in recent research to have
serious consequences: releasees are at high risk of dying or being rearrested within the
first few days and weeks after release.
In a recent special article for the New England Journal of Medicine, Binswanger
and colleagues (2007) found that former prison inmates were at relatively high risk of
death after release, particularly during the first 2 weeks. The article reports on a
retrospective cohort study of all inmates released from the Washington State Department
of Corrections from July 1999 through December 2003. The risk of death during the first
2 weeks after release, adjusted for age, sex, and race, was 12.7 times that of other state
residents. The leading causes of death for former inmates were drug overdose,
cardiovascular disease, homicide, and suicide, which are different from the leading
causes of death in the state’s general population and in the prison population. 6
It has been well established that a large proportion of parolees who return to
prison fail in the first weeks and months after their release (Maltz, 1984; Schmidt and
Witte, 1988; Ezell, 2007; Haapanen et al., 2007). In a recent analysis, Rosenfeld and
colleagues, using data from the Bureau of Justice Statistics, calculated arrest probabilities
by month for each of the 36 months postrelease for a sample of 243,334 released
prisoners in 13 states. Roughly two-thirds of prison releasees are arrested at least once
during this 3-year post release period (Langan and Levin, 2002). In one analysis, the
researchers assumed that the entire sample was eligible for arrest in any given month. A
second analysis adjusts that probability by subtracting out persons who were in jail, in
prison, or dead during the month and therefore not eligible for arrest. In both cases, the
probability of arrest declines with months out of prison: that probability during the first
month out of prison is roughly double that during the 15th month, and it then stabilizes
through the end of the 3-year period (see Figure 1) (Richard Rosenfeld, personal
communication, January 10, 2007).
The probability of arrest after release from prison differs by type of crime. Prison
releasees arrested for property or drug offenses are more likely to be arrested early in the
postrelease period than those arrested for violent offenses. This pattern is illustrated in
Figure 2, which shows the probability of arrest for releases arrested for property, drug,
and violent crimes. The arrest probabilities have been adjusted for time off the street.
Although risk for arrest declines over time for all three crime types, a much steeper
decline occurs for property and drug offenders, whose arrest risk drops by nearly 50
percent between the 1st and 15th month after release; for violent offenders, the decline is
only about 20 percent from the 1st to the 15th month out of prison. Given these data, it is
difficult to overstate the importance for parolees and their communities of access to both
supportive and transitional reentry services in those first days, weeks, and months out of
prison.
6

The study found that of 30,237 released inmates, 443 died during an average follow-up period of
1.9 years. The overall mortality rate was 777 deaths per 100,000 person-years. The adjusted
risk of death among former inmates was 3.5 times that for other state residents. During the first 2 weeks
after release, the risk of death among former inmates was 12.7 times that for other state residents, with a
markedly elevated relative risk of death from drug overdose, a shocking 129 times that of the general
population.
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Housing Needs and Barriers
Securing housing is perhaps the most immediate challenge facing prisoners after
release. Although most new releasees can count on family or friends to provide housing,
those who cannot have very limited housing options. The situation is often complicated
by a host of factors: the scarcity of affordable and available housing in many cities, legal
barriers, preconceptions that restrict tenancy for this population, and local eligibility
requirements for federally subsidized housing that may exclude many releasees, such as
those who were convicted of drug offenses. Housing eligibility restrictions on exoffenders are a critical public policy factor in planning reentry. Such restrictions and
other barriers may lead to a concentration of releasees in low-rent, distressed
neighborhoods, environs that are hardly conducive to successful reintegration.
Released prisoners who do not have stable housing arrangements are more likely
to return to prison (Metraux and Culhane, 2004). This finding suggests that the obstacles
to securing both temporary and permanent housing warrant the attention of policy
makers, practitioners, and researchers. Supportive housing programs—such as the
Oxford House model, originally conceived as a drug and alcohol addiction recovery
program for substance users, and halfway houses that include on-site services (see
Roman and Travis, 2004)--could be an option for former prisoners, but they have not
been implemented on a wide scale (Jason et al., 2006).7 Mutual-help models like Oxford
House are particularly effective at providing positive peer networks and may be an
appropriate model for postrelease housing for former prisoners (Olsen et al., 2005).
Peer Support and Individualized Services
More generally, greater peer support from other formerly incarcerated people is
associated with less recidivism (Broome et al., 1996). In fact, the presence of other
recovering peers has been shown to be more effective in achieving desistance than the
involvement of clinical staff or correctional officers alone (Wexler, 1995). The most
rigorous research study on this question was a randomized trial of an Oxford House
program that tracked more than 90 percent of the participants, (substance abusers, often
with criminal records) for 2 years: it found 50 percent less recidivism, among Oxford
House residents than among a control group. Employment at the 2-year follow-up was
also significantly higher among Oxford House participants (Jason et al., 2006).
Another reentry programming approach is a package of individualized services
for new releasees that has been referred to as “wraparound” service delivery. As the
name suggests, it involves a comprehensive array of individualized services and support
networks that are wrapped around clients, rather than presenting them only with set,
inflexible treatment programs (Portland State University Research and Training Center,
7

Researchers at DePaul University have been actively investigating this model for over 10 years
and have produced dozens of manuscripts on its advantages; see, for example, Davis et al. (2006). One of
the researchers, Dr. Brad Olson, is an adviser to the Safer Foundation’s programs. The mission of the
foundation as posted on its website is to reduce recidivism by supporting, through a full spectrum of
services, the efforts of offenders to become productive, law-abiding members of the community (see www.
[
]).
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2003). In the wraparound model, treatment services are usually provided by multiple
agencies working together as part of a collaborative interagency agreement, and each new
releasee’s service plan is developed and managed by an interdisciplinary team that
includes a caseworker, family members and community residents, and several social
services and mental health professionals.
Wraparound interventions are different from traditional case management
programs, which simply provide individuals with one caseworker whose job is to guide
them through the existing social services and try to ensure that they receive appropriate
services. Wraparound programs feature several basic elements, including the
collaborative team described above; interagency agreements; care-case coordinators to
supervise diverse cases and treatment management; a family orientation; and a unified
plan of service delivery. Wraparound approaches also emphasize the importance of
recruiting committed staff and creating programs that are culturally competent and
“strengths based” (see below) (Franz, 2003; Walker and Bruns, 2006). Wraparound
programs with basic elements have become increasingly popular since the model was
introduced in the 1980s.
Strengths-based approaches attempt to rebalance the traditional focus on an
individual’s problems, pathologies, and deficits, which can be demeaning and
unproductive; instead, they focus on resilience, positive psychology, empowerment
theories, and brief therapeutic approaches, such as solution-focused work and assessment
and practices to capitalize on individual strengths (DeJong and Berg, 2002; Burnett and
Maruna, 2004; Taxman, 2006). This approach has been found to work with families,
substance abusers, and people with mental health problems, especially juvenile offenders
(Early and GlenMaye, 2000; Rapp-Paglicchi and Roberts, 2004). The focus is on
assessing and leveraging client capabilities, talents, and resources to support change and
solve problems from a positive perspective. Belief in a client’s strength and focusing on
his or her ability to change can foster motivation rather than resistance (Clark, 2005).
AVAILABLE SERVICES AND THEIR EFFECTS
Physical Health Services
The incarcerated population in the United States is composed mostly of poor,
urban, and undereducated people who have a high prevalence of health problems. They
not only have higher rates of substance abuse and violence than the general population,
but they also suffer high rates of physical health problems. Their generally riskier lifestyles increase the prevalence of infectious diseases, such as HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis,
sexually transmitted diseases, and hepatitis (see Brewer, 2001). In addition to infectious
disease, their relatively higher rates of lack of access to health care, combined with
poverty, substandard nutrition, and poor housing or homelessness contribute to increased
risk for such chronic conditions as hypertension, cardiovascular disease, skin conditions,
gastrointestinal disease, diabetes, and asthma.
The effects of physical health problems on reentry for releasees has received some
attention (Travis, 2005), but the effects have not been carefully or widely studied. One
preliminary study suggests that releasees with medical problems are more likely to

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experience difficulties in reentry than those without such problems (Visher and Mallik
Kane, 2007).
In recent years, legal mandates have required correctional systems to provide
physical and mental health care to prisoners. And with an increase in the accreditation of
correctional health care provision (by the American Correctional Association and the
National Commission on Correctional Health Care), the quality of such care has come
under greater scrutiny.
The most innovative approach to the provision of reentry-focused health care is a
program developed at the Hampden County Correctional Center in Massachusetts.
Neighborhood health centers and the institution developed a collaboration that fostered
both greater in-prison provision of quality health care services and more consistent
linkages to needed services after a prisoner’s release. Health care providers and social
service professionals work together as part of a team from each health center: a case
manager with expertise in the social service needs of inmates and releasees strongly
complements the health care delivered by physicians and nurses. The comprehensive
approach ensures that inmates receive high-quality care and reduces the risks to good
health after release (i.e., homelessness, substance abuse relapse, and lack of health
insurance). An evaluation of the Hampden County program funded by the National
Institute of Justice (Hammett et al., 2004) found that participants reported significantly
better overall health, more interaction with community health care providers, and less
frequent use of alcohol and hard drugs in the 6 months after release in comparison with
the period before incarceration. However, an analysis of criminal history records
revealed no relationship between recidivism and participation in the program. Moreover,
there was no comparison group in this study. Replications of this program are being
funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation in nine sites, and an evaluation is
planned.
Mental Health Services
The deinstitutionalization of mentally ill people that occurred during the 1960s
and early 1970s rested on several assumptions. A key one was that people with mental
illness could find and easily access community mental health services. Unfortunately,
this assumption has not proved true. The lack of community facilities for mentally ill
people has had the unintended consequence of making the criminal justice system the
primary public response to problem behaviors associated with severe mental illness.
Among prisoners, the rates of mental illness are two to four times higher than among the
general population (Lurigio, 2001). In a 1998 survey, approximately 16 percent of those
in state prisons, local jails, or on probation said they either had a mental condition or had
stayed overnight in a mental hospital, unit, or treatment program (Ditton, 1999), about
twice as high as estimates of mental illness from the National Survey on Drug Use and
Health among the general population (see www. oas.samhsa.gov/nhsda.htm [June 2007]).
A more recent study reports that about one-half of state and federal prison inmates have a
mental health problem, based on self-reports of treatment or diagnosis during the
previous 12 months or on symptoms classified by interviewers using standard criteria
(James and Glaze, 2006). Only about one-third of state prison inmates and one-quarter

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of federal inmates with a mental health problem reported having received mental health
treatment since admission to prison.
Until the early 1990s, most mentally ill defendants could expect to be processed
by the criminal justice system in the same manner as defendants without mental illness.
In the past 10–15 years, however, more innovative approaches have been initiated. Two
federal funding initiatives—the targeted capacity expansion diversion program of the
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and the mental health
courts grant program of the Bureau of Justice Assistance—have provided resources for
new approaches for mentally ill offenders.
In 1992, a national survey of jail diversion programs estimated that only about 52
jails had some kind of diversion program for offenders with mental illness (Steadman,
Barbera, and Dennis, 1994); by 2003, the number had increased to 294 (U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services, 2004). The approaches are not uniform. They include a
variety of interventions that facilitate the provision of services to offenders in order to
speed their release from incarceration. The overriding purpose of diversion programs is
to provide services and reduce the length of incarceration; some also attempt to reduce or
dismiss the charges brought against offenders. A cross-site evaluation of nine jail
diversion programs found that, in general, the programs decreased the number of days
spent incarcerated, thereby reducing criminal justice costs, and also reduced rearrests
among participants (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2004).
A different approach for mentally ill offenders is mental health courts, a judicially
managed program that relies on therapeutic jurisprudence (modeled after drug courts), in
which the primary focus is on reduction or dismissal of the charges when a specified
treatment regimen is successfully completed. In the late 1990s, only a few such courts
accepted cases; since then, some 70 others have been established or are in planning
stages. In 2000, the Mental Health Courts Grant Program was created by the America's
Law Enforcement and Mental Health Project Act. The program is managed by the
Bureau of Justice Assistance, which provided grants to 37 courts in 2002 and 2003. The
agency also funded technical assistance for all existing courts through 2006. As of July
2006, there were 113 mental health courts that responded to a survey conducted by the
National Alliance for the Mentally Ill, the National GAINS Center for People with CoOccurring Disorders in the Justice System, the TAPA Center for Jail Diversion, and the
Council of State Governments.8 Under a court’s authority, defendants undergo regular
therapy sessions and their medication is often monitored, sometimes allowing them to
avoid prison time. Because of the newness of these courts, little is known about their
effectiveness or whether the effects for parolees may differ from those for other criminal
justice populations. Current research examining mental health courts is under way.

8

For the purpose of the survey, mental health courts were defined as adult criminal courts that (1)
had a separate docket dedicated to persons with mental illnesses; (2) diverted criminal defendants from jail
into treatment programs; and (3) monitored the defendants during treatment and had the ability to impose
criminal sanctions for failures to comply with program requirements.

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Mentoring Programs
Mentoring programs have a long history in delinquency prevention, and
evaluation studies show positive effects for at-risk and delinquent youth (see Branch and
Tierney, 2000; Herrera, Sipe, and McClanahan, 2000). The goal of mentoring is to
support the development of prosocial life-styles, thereby reducing an individual’s
exposure to or the temptations of risky and problem behaviors.
Certain elements are essential to effective mentoring programs, including a high
level of contact between mentor and mentee and a relationship that defines the mentor as
a trusted adviser and supporter rather than an authority figure. There are several factors
that serve as prerequisites for successful mentoring programs, including: (1) volunteer
screening to eliminate inappropriate mentors, (2) communication and limit-setting
training for mentors, (3) procedures that take account of mentors’ and mentees’
preferences, and (4) intensive supervision and support of each match (Center for
Substance Abuse Prevention, 2000).
An analysis (Jolliffe and Farrington 2007) of 18 studies in the United States and
the United Kingdom on the impact of mentoring on ex-offenders and recidivism found
the following:
•
•
•
•
•
•

Of 18 studies, 7 showed that mentoring of ex-offenders had a statistically positive
effect.
Subsequent offending was reduced by 4 to 11 percent.
The methodologically superior studies did not show a significant reduction in
reoffending.
Programs that reduced recidivism used more frequent and longer mentoring
sessions: once or more per week and 5 hours or more per session.
Mentoring was only successful in reducing recidivism when included in a menu
of interventions.
The benefits of mentoring did not appear to persist after mentoring ended.

Maruna (2001) has argued that the benefits of the mentoring process are often greater for
the mentor than for the mentee (see also Cressy’s (1995) notion of “reflexive
reformation”).
Adult mentoring programs for former prisoners are being studied in the context of
the Department of Labor’s program, Ready4Work (R4W) Program, which also has a
strong faith-based component. The mentors and coaches are drawn from the community,
especially faith-based organizations. Focus groups indicate that the clients (potential
mentees) want mentoring, and they express a particular preference for mentors who have
had a prisoner/reentry experience. Both individual and group mentoring models are
being implemented. 9 Once they are involved in the program, mentees continue to want
mentoring, and they also want to become mentors themselves, participating as both a
mentor and a mentee. Several Ready4Work participants have “graduated” and become
mentors.
9

Preliminary evidence suggests that group mentoring may not be as powerful as traditional
mentoring (Herrera et al., 2002), although it may be a less costly alternative.

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A preliminary report provides examples of mentoring in the R4W sites that appear
promising (Juscovy, 2006). An evaluation of the program now under way will examine
the frequency and duration of participation in the mentoring aspects of R4W as it relates
to a releasee’s successful reentry. The Department of Labor has included mentoring as a
key component in its new Prisoner Reentry Initiative, again with an emphasis on faithbased organizations as the source of the mentors.
Despite the variety and promising prospects of the approaches just described,
community services currently available for new releasees may not be meeting their needs.
In a survey of men released from state prison to Chicago, 48 percent said that they had
used some services in the 2 months since release (MacKenzie, 2006; LaVigne, Visher,
and Castro, 2005; Giordano, Cernkovich, and Rudolph, 2002), but when asked what
services were most useful, 17 percent said that none of them was useful. When asked
“what would be most helpful right now” (6 months postrelease), 64 percent mentioned a
job or job training, 53 percent mentioned financial support, 24 percent mentioned
education, 38 percent mentioned housing, and 41 percent mentioned health insurance
(LaVigne, Visher, and Castro, 2005).
Nonetheless, in community corrections, there is a research base suggesting what
works at the individual offender level. The effects of a variety of programs for those
returning to communities have been examined in comprehensive reviews of evaluations.
One showed that parolees who stayed in halfway houses after release committed less
severe and less frequent crimes (Seiter and Kadela, 2003). A second review showed that
those intensive supervision programs with a strong treatment component had a sizable
effect on recidivism (Aos et al., 2006). A third review concluded that human serviceoriented programs are much more effective than those based on a control or deterrent
philosophy. All of the strategies identified as effective by Mackenzie (2006) target
dynamic criminogenic factors, are skill oriented, are based on cognitive-behavioral
models, and treat multiple offender deficits simultaneously in particular, there is growing
consensus that practices focusing on individual-level change, including cognitive change,
education, and drug treatment, are likely to be more effective than other strategies, such
as programs that only increase opportunities for work, reunite families, or provide
housing (MacKenzie, 2006; Andrews and Bonta, 2003). These conclusions are consistent
with several large meta-analyses of the evaluation literature (Aos et al., 2006: Andrews et
al., 1990; Lipsey, 1995; Lipsey and Cullen, 2007).
These findings seem to be somewhat at odds with the longitudinal research on
desistance, which highlights the conditions that lead to law-abiding behavior, such as
having a stable marriage and having strong ties to work (see Sampson and Laub, 1993;
Laub and Sampson, 2003). However, it may be that programs associated with the
desistance findings have had weak designs or implementation problems or that the
evaluations have been flawed. Or it may be that individual-level change is a prerequisite
for the conditions under which desistance takes hold. Or it may be that programs that
target these conditions would be more successful if operated in close connection to
individual change modalities.

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Best Practices Design and Implementation Problems
The only evaluation of a contemporary prisoner reentry program to use a random
assignment design, Project Greenlight in New York, demonstrates the implementation
difficulties facing these programs (Wilson and Davis, 2006). Project Greenlight was
developed by the Vera Institute of Justice on the basis of research and best practice
models, and the institute believed it was creating an evidence-based reentry program.
However, a thorough examination of the proposed model and its implementation revealed
that the program modified best practices to fit institutional requirements, was delivered
ineffectively, did not match individual needs to services, and failed to implement any
postrelease continuation of services and support (Wilson and Davis, 2006; see also
Visher, 2006; Marlowe, 2006).
The evaluation found that the program participants performed significantly worse
than a control group on multiple measures of recidivism after 1 year, a finding that the
evaluators attribute to a combination of implementation difficulties, program design, and
a mismatch between participant needs and program content. In response to the evaluation
report, Marlowe (2006) argues that the evidence base for the program was flawed from
the beginning, with weak designs and unproven, unstandardized interventions. Edward
Rhine, (Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction) and colleagues (2006) are
more optimistic about reentry programming in general, and point out that Project
Greenlight was not notably different from other failed reentry programs and that the
treatment was not delivered appropriately (see also Wilson and Davis, 2006; Visher,
2006; Marlowe, 2006).
CONCLUSIONS
This review of programs and services for former prisoners suggests three main
conclusions regarding their effectiveness in reducing recidivism and problem behaviors.
First, there is scientific evidence that several programs and approaches reduce violations
of community supervision requirements, arrests for new crimes, and drug use. They
include cognitive-behavioral therapeutic approaches and frequent testing for drug use,
coupled with treatment. Mentoring programs and comprehensive multiservice
employment initiatives show promise but require further, more rigorous research.
Second, inadequate implementation of program principles and procedures appears
to be a significant obstacle in the way of being able to determine program effectiveness
or finding out whether a program might have benefits for participants.
Third, a major limitation of current program evaluation results is the failure to
account fully for self-selection bias. Random assignment of persons to treatment and
control conditions remains rare in research on the reentry process. Greater use of
experimental designs, when such designs are feasible, is essential for drawing valid
conclusions about reentry program effectiveness. When such designs are not feasible,
greater attention should be paid to the selection of comparison groups and statistical
adjustments for existing differences between program participants and nonparticipants.
Although the field has moved beyond “nothing works” in assessments of program effects
on reentry outcomes, it can identify with high confidence only a very few best practices
for reducing recidivism and enhancing desistance among people leaving prison to return

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to local communities. More research, especially more experimental research, is needed
to identify interventions that could significantly improve outcomes of community
supervision for parolees (see Chapter 6).

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Figure 1. Probability of Arrest for a New Crime After Release from Prison
0.120

0.100

0.080

0.060

0.040

0.020

0.000
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36
Month After Release

NOTE: Probabilities adjusted for time off the street.

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Figure 2. Probability of Arrest for a Violent,Property, or Drug
Crime 36 Months After Release From Prison
0.024
0.022

Violent
Property
Drug

0.020
0.018
0.016
0.014
0.012
0.010
0.008
0.006
0.004

1

3

5

7

9

11

13

Note: Probabilities adjusted for time off the street

15

17

19

Months

21

23

25

27

29

31

33

35

Source: Richard Rosenfeld, Robert Fornango, and
Joel Wallman

SOURCE: The analysis for this figure was conducted by Richard Rosenfeld, Robert Fornango, and
Joel Wallman.

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5
Criminal Justice Institutions and Community Resources

ROLE OF THE COURTS
As policy makers struggle with the challenges of prisoner reentry, attention has
increasingly focused on what role the courts might play. In the current allocation of
responsibilities for prisoner reentry, courts traditionally play a marginal role. Usually a
court’s responsibility ends when a defendant is found or pleads guilty and is sentenced by
the judge. Appellate courts may hear issues on appeal, but the trial judge’s responsibility
usually ends when the trial ends. Judges typically have no role in the broad array of
activities that carry out the terms of the sentence, prepare the inmate for release, or
transition the returning prisoner back to his status as a member of the community (Office
of Justice Programs 1999). However, in the last 15 years, courts have begun to play a
more active role in overseeing the sentences they impose, and there is growing interest in
a new form of jurisprudence whereby judges oversee ‘specialized’ or ‘problem-solving’
courts with the goal of assisting in offender rehabilitation.
Some seven years ago, Court Review, the official journal of the American Judges
Association, devoted an entire special issue (Vol. 37, No. 1) to the theme of therapeutic
jurisprudence, an interdisciplinary perspective that seeks to augment the law by bringing
to it insights from psychology, criminology, social work, and related behavioral sciences.
The special issue of Court Review is significant because it evidences a movement of
therapeutic jurisprudence from an academic perspective to a tool for actually changing
practice. The special issue was introduced by Judge William Schma (2000) in an article
titled “Judging for the New Millennium.” Applying a therapeutic jurisprudence
perspective in practice, Judge Schma advocates that judges become active “problemsolvers” in their courtrooms.
Therapeutic jurisprudence has been most readily brought into play in judicial
proceedings of specialized treatment-oriented courts, or “problem-solving courts.”
Therapeutic jurisprudence recognizes the reality that the legal system may not have the
expertise to solve social and behavioral problems, but that courts can lead a
multidisciplinary team to promote behavioral change.
The most mature example of the judiciary’s involvement in specialized courts the
involve offender rehabilitation is the drug court. First implemented in 1989, the growth
of drug courts has been unprecedented: there are now more than 1,550 drug courts now
operating in the United States (National Institute of Justice, 2006). In a drug court,
judges use a case management approach to identify and coordinate local services that
help offenders refrain from drug use. When violations of the drug court contract occur,
the judge usually administers a predetermined set of graduated, parsimonious sanctions
for violations.

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Studies suggest that recidivism rates are lower for drug court participants (and
have been reported to be as low as 4% for program graduates), although the recidivism
statistics vary by the characteristics of the specific drug court and its target population
(National Institute of Justice, 2006). Unfortunately, many of these studies are not
empirically rigorous; therefore, it is uncertain whether the drug court alone was
responsible for the low recidivism rates. Nonetheless, the evidence does show that the
best adult drug courts are effective at reducing system costs, crime, and drug use
(Government Accountability Office, 2005). Urban Institute researcher John Roman
(2005, p. [need page number for quote]) recently summarized the available evidence
noting:
There have been more than 100 research studies about adult drug courts and if
you look at the best, most rigorous 25 of those, you probably come to the
conclusion that drug courts reduce criminal offending by 15 to 20 percent. So
this is not a panacea but represents a real reduction in offending levels.
Judge Cindy Lederman of the 11th Judicial Circuit Court in Florida noted at the
workshop that the essential component needed in a reentry court is some sort of
motivation for a litigant to change. For example, in dependency courts, where
therapeutic jurisprudence concepts have always been used and are even part of the law,
people’s children can be taken away, and yet many defendants are not motivated to do
what is necessary to get their children back. Providing incentives for releasees to change
may require fundamental changes in the law and in judicial and criminal justice
philosophy. For these models to work for the more than 600,000 people who are released
from prisons and return to local communities each year, a fundamental change in the use
of judicial resources will almost certainly be required. The question becomes one of cost
effectiveness: Is it worth it? Are these problem-solving courts better, more effective,
than traditional courts that function well?
REENTRY COURTS
Due to the perceived success of drug courts, judges have become more receptive
to new problem-solving approaches to adjudication, and the drug court model has now
been extended to domestic violence courts, family treatment courts for dependency
proceedings, mental health courts, and DWI offenses (driving while intoxicated or, in
some jurisdictions, driving under the influence) (for an overview, see Casey and
Rottman, 2003).
Jeremy Travis1 urged the application of the specialized court model to prisoner
reentry in 2000. As with drug courts, Travis proposed that active judicial authority could
be applied to a “reentry court” to provide graduated sanction and positive reinforcement
and to marshal resources for offender support. Drug courts usually operate prior to a
prison sentence (e.g., as a diversion program); reentry courts would operate after prison
(Travis, 2000).
1

Then a senior scholar in residence at the Urban Institute in Washington, DC, he had formerly
been director of the National Institute of Justice; he is now president of John Jay College of Criminal
Justice.
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In his book, But They All Come Back, Travis (2005) noted several benefits to
reentry courts, saying that they cut across organizational boundaries, making it more
likely that offenders are held accountable and supported in their reentry attempts.
Reentry courts can also involve family members, friends, and others in a reentry plan. He
also noted that judges command the public’s confidence while, in contrast, the parole
system is held in low public esteem. Moreover, judges carry out their business in open
courtrooms, not closed offices, so the public, former prisoners, and family members and
others can benefit from the open articulation of reasons for a government decision.
Travis also believes that a judge is in a unique position, given the prestige of the
office, to confer public and official validation on an offender’s reform efforts. Public
ceremonies are thought to be critical to long-term success (Maruna and LeBel, 2003).
Ideally, the judge who originally sentenced a prisoner would be the same judge who
serves as that person’s reentry manager. Most importantly, reentry courts explicitly give
recognition to the fact that an offender will come back to live in the community.
The core elements of both a drug court and a reentry court are similar (Office of
Justice Programs, 1999):
•

•
•
•
•

•

Assessment and planning: Following assessment of inmates’ needs, corrections
officials—working in conjunction with the reentry court judge—establish
linkages to social services, housing, job training and work opportunities to
support successful reintegration.
Active oversight: Reentry court clients are seen frequently, probably once a
month, beginning right after release and continuing until the end of their parole.
Management of support services: A case manager brokers an array of resources.
Accountability to the community: A mechanism exists for incorporating
community perspectives, such as a citizen advisory board.
Graduate and parsimonious sanctions: A predetermined range of sanctions for
violations of parole conditions would be swiftly, predictably, and universally
applied.
Rewards for success: Milestones in the reentry process trigger recognition and
rewards through positive judicial reinforcement (for example, graduation
ceremonies and early release from parole supervision).
Operationally, a reentry process would start at the time of release from prison,
when a “contract” would be drawn up between the court and a parolee.2 The
contract would list the conditions the parolee must follow, and the parolee would
be required to appear in court every month to demonstrate how well the contract
is working. The court appearances need not be long; they are designed to remind
the parolee of the conditions in the contract. If the judge determined that a
parolee needs more help, she or he could quickly mobilize the necessary
resources. If a parolee failed to abide by the contract, the judge could use a
variety of intermediate sanctions to encourage compliance. At the end of the
period of supervision, the judge would oversee a “graduation ceremony.” These
ceremonies are designed to celebrate the individual’s successful reentry into the
2

Although we limit the discussion to parolees, in principle released prisoners who are not on
parole could also fall under the jurisdiction of a reentry court.
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community. Petersilia (2003) also endorsed the reentry court model and
suggested that it incorporate goal-oriented parole, where the length of time in a
reentry court would be reduced as an offender met or exceeded court
expectations.
In February 2000 the Office of Justice Programs began the Reentry Courts
Initiative (OJP-RCI), designed to provide technical assistance to jurisdictions interested
in developing reentry courts. Nine pilot sites were selected: California, Colorado,
Delaware, Florida, Iowa, Kentucky, New York, Ohio, and West Virginia. The programs
operated rather similarly except for their target populations (see
www.ojp.usdoj.gov/reentry/communities.html [
]):
•
•
•
•

One of Iowa’s programs focused on offenders with dual diagnoses of
mental health and addiction problems), that is, the drug addiction disorder
co-occurred with their mental health disorder.
Delaware’s Reentry Court focused on offenders who had served
particularly long prison terms.
The Kentucky programs focused on nonviolent drug offenders who had
served a portion of their sentence in prison and were then released to an
outpatient drug treatment program for 1 year (Hiller et al., 2002).
Ohio’s reentry court created an expanded presentence report for prisonbound defendants, which was translated into a reentry plan. The Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections then provided the program
services indicated on the reentry plan, and a newly created court-based
position of "reentry liaison" visited the prisoner once a month while they
were in prison. When the prisoner was released, he or she was brought
back to the sentencing judge at the time of release for aftercare services
and supervision (Wilkinson and Bucholtz, 2003).

A process evaluation of the reentry court pilot projects was done early in the
program (Lindquist, Hardison and Lattimore, 2003). The authors found that most reentry
courts did offer comprehensive services to their program participants, including
substance abuse treatment, family counseling, employment and vocational assistance, and
housing assistance. Judges who participated in the reentry courts continued to be
supportive of the model, although numerous obstacles were identified with program
implementation. The most common obstacle noted was the difficulty in finding
employment and affordable housing for parolees. The researchers also noted difficulties
in interagency cooperation, particularly among parole authorities, treatment providers,
and the judiciary. The researchers urged an outcome evaluation of the reentry court
model, but it was never carried out.
At present, reentry courts are largely experimental, and neither their impact nor
their costs and benefits have been rigorously evaluated. A 4-year study of inmates
returning to Allen County, Indiana found significant cost savings from the reentry court
programs, but the offenders were not randomly assigned to program conditions
(Lombard, 2006). Given the importance of the reentry problem and the success of
handling other offender populations through the problem-solving court model, the costs
and benefits of reentry courts is a subject that begs for more rigorous research.

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It is critical to understand the impact of reentry courts on reoffending in
comparison with traditional services. Without that information, one cannot determine
how traditional parole agents can best interact with reentry court judges, whether the
public will accept and community-based organizations will give priority to services for
parolees when other needy populations need those same services, or whether state
legislators will be willing to pay for the costs of reentry courts. As is the case for other
specialized courts, it is necessary to determine whether it is the charismatic leadership of
a judge and the interaction with the client that leads to desistance and other positive
outcomes or a strict adherence to a sanctioning protocol. Another possibility is simply
that clients are getting more substance abuse treatment and other services than they
would have otherwise had. If the last situation is the case, then couldn’t those enhanced
services be provided by traditional parole agents rather than sitting court judges? These
are all important questions in need of more rigorous research.
COMMUNITY CAPACITY
As a society, the United States has devoted relatively little thought and resources
to helping people make the transition from the very structured system that characterizes
prisons to freedom of movement and independent decision making in communities. And
although the capacity of communities to which releasees return vary, most of them are
inadequately prepared to assist formerly incarcerated people in making prosocial
decisions, acquiring needed skills, and having the kind of opportunities (e.g., substance
abuse treatment, employment counseling, family reunification) that support successful
reentry. A high proportion of releasees go to communities that are actually negative
environments, with high crime rates or extensive drug markets that represent real threats
to successful reentry. In some instances, communities have been fundamentally
weakened in three ways: by individuals’ criminal activities, by their absence due to
incarceration, and then by the burden of their return (Kubrin and Stewart 2006; Clear et
al., 2005, Travis, 2005).
Community capacity for prisoner reentry refers to two types of capacity—social
capacity and resource capacity. The role that communities can play in fostering
successful reentry and desistance has been underestimated in most public policy
discussions about former prisoners. Communities can facilitate behaviors that contribute
to desistance when neighborhoods and broader communities try to reintegrate former
prisoners into law-abiding roles. Success is more likely when releasees can readily find
places to live, have supportive families, are offered employment or educational
opportunities, and have a way to participate in noncriminal networks. Successful reentry
is not something a former inmate achieves alone, but in the context of and with the
support of personal and community institutions, such as families, churches, and
employers.
Communities can also facilitate a return to criminal behavior by being unable or
unwilling to provide support for releasees. Some communities can be characterized as
disorganized, that is, social integration in them is low. The people in such communities
are not closely connected by work, family, and institutions, so releasees are unlikely to
receive the kind of support that facilitates successful reentry. Rather, such neighborhoods
are likely to have crime-conducive activity and networks that a former prisoner can too

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easily return to—the same or similar activity and behavior that led to the person’s
incarceration.
The importance of an “integrated,” strong community as a regulator of behavior is
an old idea in the social sciences (Bursik and Grasmick 1993; Shaw and McKay 1969). In
the last decade or so, renewed consideration of this idea has focused on collective
efficacy—the capacity of a group of people in a neighborhood to work together to solve
problems or otherwise take actions that affect their collective circumstances (Sampson et
al., 1997). That is, a community uses its collective “social capital”—the links and
networks between residents—for collective good.
An important facet of collective good is social control, of both residents and
visitors or newcomers to the community. Neighborhood collective efficacy reduces
neighborhood crime (Sampson et al., 1997). Residents in these communities actively
participate in the informal social control that is a vital part of crime control. In some
instances, such efforts support the efforts of police. Residents may take note of strangers
and problematic behavior and situations, such as abandoned cars or drug dealing, and
they take action. The police, in turn, respond to and support such efforts. The behavior
and actions of releasees who return to such a community should be positively affected by
these kinds of informal social control, as well as formal social controls. When collective
efficacy is weak, new releasees, like other people in the community, are less regulated by
informal social controls, and their chances for reinvolvement in criminal behavior are
likely to be higher. The impact of collective efficacy on the criminal behavior of
returning prisoners, as distinct from crime generally, is an important topic for future
research.
Many releasees return to the same or similar communities as those they lived in
prior to incarceration (e.g., Visher and Farrell, 2005). They choose to live there because
those are the places where their families and friends live and where they can find
housing. In many cases, those communities are disorganized ones. Even when releasees
choose to live in new neighborhoods to avoid the people or situations that led to their
incarceration, the new neighborhoods are generally similar to the old ones, disorganized
and with low collective efficacy (Visher et al., 2004).
Moreover, when large numbers of former prisoners live close together in a
community, they contribute to low collective efficacy because they are less likely to be
employed, have lower incomes, and have fewer networks of people and institutions to
support law-abiding behaviors (Clear et al., 2005). Ironically, the communities that may
be the most accepting of releasees may also be the places that are the least likely to
exercise social control. They are often communities with high rates of crime and
substance use, which limit the possibilities for releasees’ successful reentry. Releasees
who report living in neighborhoods in “unsafe” or disorganized communities or where
drug dealing is common are more likely to report using drugs after release, are less likely
to be employed, and are more likely to return to prison than other releasees (Visher and
Farrell, 2005).
Most people—including parole agents and corrections officials—believe that
releasees who are employed have a higher probability of successful reentry, and research
shows that employment does reduce recidivism (Bushway and Reuter, 2002). Yet people
with prison records are much less likely to be offered jobs (Pager 2003; Pager and
Quillian 2005) and are more likely to live in neighborhoods where others are out of work

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(Clear, forthcoming). At the same time, communities with more unemployed or
marginally employed people have lower collective efficacy than other communities
(Crutchfield, Matsueda, and Drakulich, 2006; Fagan, Piquero and West 2006) and higher
crime rates (Crutchfield, 1989). There is also some evidence from research on restorative
justice and the involvement of victims in mediation conferences and other participatory
activities that the involvement of citizens in the criminal justice process has positive
effects on participants and may be therapeutic for releasees. Given opportunities to
interact positively with others in activities that benefit the community, former prisoners
begin to see themselves as part of something, a community (Maruna, 2001).
Often overlooked in reentry policies and practices are the institutions—including
police, business sector, and health and human services—that can play important roles in
successful reentry. The business community is not often involved in local discussions
about the problems of crime and reentry, yet business is the source of money and jobs
that could contribute to supporting communitywide reentry programs. Through a
communitywide strategic planning process, Baltimore and Chicago have brought the
business community into these discussions, and business leaders have responded by
offering jobs to former prisoners (see, e.g.,
www.oedworks.com/whatsnew/pr0912202.htm [June 2007]).
Of particular concern is how these institutions coordinate hiring policies, on-thejob or other employment training, eligibility for services, and decision making about
parole revocation. Often these institutions are unaware of one another’s policies and
practices, which creates inefficiencies and obstacles for former prisoners. In addition,
some of these institutions may not have the institutional capacity to provide services to
releasees, or they may not be familiar with the special problems of this population. This
gap in the capacity of service providers is difficult to address, but it is a complaint often
voiced by community residents when asked what should be done to support former
prisoners in their transition from prison to local community (Visher and Farrell, 2005).

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6
Conclusions, Recommendation, and Research Agenda
Two major conclusions emerge from our review of research on parole and
desistance from crime. The first is that desistance from crime varies widely among
parolees. Released prisoners with lengthy criminal records and who have been to prison
several times before have very high recidivism rates—over 80 percent are rearrested
within three years of release from prison. In contrast, less than half of first-time releasees
and older releasees are rearrested within three years of their release (Langan and Levin,
2002; Rosenfeld et al., 2005; Solomon et al., 2005). Indeed, when it comes to desistance
or recidivism, there is no such thing as the "average" parolee. In a word, the parolee
population is heterogeneous. It follows that the types of services, sanctions, and
supervision strategies effective in increasing desistance among some groups of parolees
may not be effective for other groups.
The second conclusion that emerges from our review of research on recidivism
and desistance concerns intervention effects. We define “intervention” broadly to include
both the routine functions of the criminal justice system (e.g., parole supervision) and the
characteristics of discrete programs and treatments (e.g., drug abuse treatment). With
some exceptions, the characteristics of interventions, including parole supervision itself,
that are effective in increasing parolees’ desistance from crime are unknown. This is not
the same as saying that “nothing works” in reducing recidivism or increasing desistance
(Farabee, 2005; Martinson, 1974); existing research knowledge is too thin to support that
strong conclusion. In Petersilia’s (2004) review of the prisoner reentry programs, she
estimates that fewer than 1 percent of all prisoner reentry programs implemented in the
United States in the last decade have been subject to a formal evaluation, and the vast
majority of those did not use a randomized experimental research design. She writes that
“using this ‘body’ of research to conclude anything about which reentry programs ‘work’
or ‘don’t work’ seems misguided” (2004, p. 7). A major impediment to knowledge about
“what works” in increasing desistance is poor program implementation. Without proper
implementation, as well as careful evaluation, one cannot determine whether a given
program succeeds or fails in its conception, design, or operation.
These two themes of parolee heterogeneity and intervention effects frame our
summary of what is known and what needs to be learned about the characteristics of
parolees and of the programs and interventions intended to increase their desistance from
crime. In addition to our summary of the research findings on parolees and desistance
programs and our proposed agenda for future research on parolees and their desistance
from crime, we offer a policy recommendation that is driven by the research findings.
WHAT IS KNOWN ABOUT PAROLEES AND DESISTANCE
We use a comparatively permissive criterion for classifying a given research
finding on parolees and programs as established or settled “knowledge.” We include a
research result in the category of “known” if it has been replicated across several studies

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and is not (or not any longer) subject to widespread dispute in the research community.
A more restrictive criterion, for example, that any of the studies producing the result must
meet the rigorous requirements of experimental science, would yield a much leaner
knowledge base on the characteristics of parolees and effective programs. The difference
is analogous to that between the “preponderance of evidence” and “beyond a reasonable
doubt” evidentiary standard in jurisprudence. We adopt the former for organizing the
extant research on parolees and desistance; however, for future research, we propose that,
when feasible, it should be conducted and interpreted according to more rigorous
standards of proof.
The need for more rigorous research methods in evaluating both pre and post
release programs is beyond dispute, but the use of random designs does raise ethical
questions in an environment that combines intervention and social control objectives.
For example, a positive drug test typically triggers a sanction in most jurisdictions. Are
treatments more restrictive or likelier to result in official sanctions than baseline parole
conditions? These kinds of issues need to be thought out carefully in the design of
experimental research. However, research suggests that ethical randomized designs are
possible, especially where there is a standard program that can serve as a control for other
randomized treatment groups, that is, in a situation where no one would get less than the
standard post release treatment (See for example, National Research Council 2001).
Heterogeneity in the Parole Population
Recidivism rates, defined as the probability that parolees are rearrested or
returned to prison, are significantly different for different groups of parolees. They are
lower for women than for men; lower for older than younger parolees; lower for people
with relatively short criminal records; and lower for violent offenders than for property
or drug offenders (Langan and Levin, 2002; Petersilia, 2003).
Black parolees have higher recidivism rates than white parolees for violent and
property crime, but not for drug crimes (Rosenfeld et al., 2005; see, also, Langan and
Levin, 2002; Solomon et al., 2005). We note, however, that the race difference in
recidivism is smaller than the race difference in overall arrest or imprisonment rates.
Parolees released from prison for the first time have lower recidivism rates than
those who have been released in the past and then returned to prison. This finding holds
even when sex, age, race, criminal record, offense type, and other characteristics of
parolees are controlled (Rosenfeld et al., 2005; Tonry, 2004). The cause of this
difference has not been established, however. Selection may play a major role; past
failure at reentry predicts future failure. It also is possible that parole authorities and the
police supervise and watch “two-time losers” more closely or are less willing to overlook
any violations of their parole contracts. The finding that past imprisonment predicts
future rearrest and imprisonment is consistent with the idea that the prison experience
itself is criminogenic, but, recidivism does not appear to be related to the length of time
an individual spends in prison (Rosenfeld et al., 2005). Another possibility is that people
who have been imprisoned multiple times possess unmeasured traits or deficits that
impede desistance. At present, the simple conclusion one can draw from what is known
is that past recidivism predicts future recidivism.

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One of the most significant findings that emerges from our work is that the peak
rates for recidivism occur in the days and weeks immediately following release. Arrest
rates decline over time after release from prison, especially for property and drug crimes.
Moreover, death rates for new releasees—within the first days and weeks—are much
higher than for matched demographic groups in the general population. This is a new
research finding, the importance of which is underscored by the fact that the causes of
death for parolees and inmates are different. For the state prison population, the leading
causes of death are disease related: cardiovascular disease, cancer, liver diseases, and
AIDS-related illnesses. For the releasee population in the state of Washington, by
contrast, the four leading causes of death were drug overdose, cardiovascular disease,
homicide, and suicide. Two of these, homicide and drug overdose, are directly related to
risky behaviors, and all may be preventable if close attention and intensive services are
given to these releasees at the time of release.
Parolees are characterized by a range of deficits in a number of areas. Large
fractions of them have educational and cognitive deficits, substance abuse and mental
health problems, inadequate housing, and difficulties in finding and keeping a job
(Petersilia, 2003; Travis, 2005). A clear need exists for appropriate support services and
treatment for people reentering the community from prison with these deficits. Adequate
research on specific elements such as the nature, timing, and dosage of services has not
been conducted. Research on this population and on the effects of such interventions is
the only way to establish whether the absence or inadequacy of services for released
prisoners is causally related to recidivism.
Formal and Informal Controls
The limited research that has been done shows that formal parole supervision has
only a small effect on recidivism. However, we again must caution against drawing a
broad conclusion on the basis of existing research, which is methodologically weak and
masks large differences in local variations in supervision and services received by
parolees. The effect of parole on recidivism appears to be a function of selection of
prisoners for release rather than supervision in the community. Controlling for sex, race,
age, criminal history, and other factors, parolees released through a discretionary process
have a lower recidivism rate than those subject to mandatory release—even though both
groups experience generally the same conditions of supervision in the community
(Rosenfeld et al., 2005). The effects of parole supervision, however, differ for different
groups of parolees. Parole supervision appears to reduce the recidivism rates of parolees
who are comparatively low risk (e.g., women and parolees with shorter criminal records),
but has little effect on the recidivism rate of higher risk parolees (Solomon, 2005, 2006).
Informal social controls, such as marriage and work, are more effective than
formal social controls, such as parole supervision and rearrest, in increasing desistance
from crime in ways that are generally similar across crime types. Comparatively strong
evidence exists regarding the causal effect on criminal behavior of informal social
control, especially marriage. Married men are less likely than unmarried men to commit
crimes, and recent research has extended this finding to women (King et al., 2007;
Armstrong and Griffin, 2003) The effect of marriage on criminal behavior persists even
when the traits that predispose men to marry are controlled (Laub and Sampson, 2003;
Sampson, Laub, and Wimer, 2006; King et al., 2007). The marriage findings for females
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are more ambiguous. Whether the marriage effect on criminal behavior applies
specifically to parolees is not known.
Intervention Effects
Several kinds of intervention programs have been carried out and studied enough
for some conclusions to be drawn, although, as noted above, the quality of
implementation in these programs is often wanting. The research does show that the
effectiveness of interventions to increase desistance from crime depends heavily on
implementation characteristics, including staff quality and training, program length and
intensity, and organizational readiness. Moreover, few successful interventions have
been “manualized.”
The effects of in-prison programs on recidivism are rather small. In-prison
programs have larger effects on recidivism when coupled with postrelease communitybased programs. Among psychological therapeutic approaches for reducing criminal
behavior, cognitive-behavioral therapeutic approaches are more effective than other
approaches in reducing recidivism. For substance abuse, treatment appears to reduce
criminal behavior, at least during the period a person is in treatment. However, it is not
clear whether this result applies to parolees specifically. It is clear that treatment for
substance abuse is more effective in reducing recidivism in combination with criminal
justice supervision than either treatment or supervision alone. Criminal offenders under
legal pressure to undergo substance abuse treatment have higher attendance rates and
remain in treatment longer than those entering treatment voluntarily (National Institute on
Drug Abuse, 2006).
RESEARCH AGENDA
The research literature raises more questions than it answers about the
characteristics of parolees and the effects of interventions on desistance. For that reason,
our list of questions to guide future research is longer than our list of research findings.
The topics are not in order of priority.
As with our description of what is known, we divide the proposed research
agenda into questions about the heterogeneity of parolees and those on the effects of
interventions in reducing recidivism and increasing desistance from crime. We have not
aimed for exhaustiveness in framing the agenda, but rather have emphasized those
questions that arise most directly from the existing research. Nonetheless, answers to
these questions would greatly enhance knowledge about desistance from crime and the
characteristics of interventions that increase desistance. In addition, continuing research
is needed on how to develop and standardize measures of desistance, a more complex
concept than recidivism. The committee believes that research on community
supervision and desistance from crime should constitute a major research priority of the
National Institute of Justice and of private organizations that fund criminal justice
research.

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Understanding Parole Heterogeneity
Early Failure Early failure is a high research priority if recidivism is to be
reduced and desistance supported and encouraged. Does the fact that much recidivism
occurs in the first days after release mean that people predisposed to fail usually fail
quickly or that those days are especially risky for all released prisoners? How do
parolees who fail early differ from those who fail later? Is motivation to succeed a key
factor and if so, what kinds of programs and policies could support such motivation?
More data is needed on the individual characteristics of persons who fail on parole.
Recidivism Rates Recidivism rates can be seen as one measure of the failure to
desist from crime. What drives this failure? Are the higher recidivism rates of parolees
with multiple imprisonments a function of selection (a predisposition to fail among those
who have failed before) , the consequence of the criminogenic effects of imprisonment,
the consequences of community characteristics, or the result of undetected individual
traits?
Special Populations What kinds of services will best meet the needs of specific
groups of parolees in the future, such as women or elderly releasees? Why are racial and
ethnic disparities in the rearrest and reincarceration of parolees different from (lower
than) disparities in initial police contacts , arrests, convictions, and prison sentences?
Informal Social Controls How do the effects of informal social control differ
over the course of criminal careers? Do the known effects of marriage on desistance
specifically hold for parolees? What forms of informal control are most effective with
younger parolees with high expected recidivism rates and low marriage rates? What
drives the low rates of formal marriage among this population and what could be done to
increase rates of formal marriage? What dynamics underlie the difference in outcomes of
marriage and cohabitation in relation to crime? How can parole take advantage of and
leverage “naturally occurring” guardians in the community, such as spouses, parents,
neighbors, and employers?
Community Effects on Parolees What are the effects of neighborhood or
community conditions—such as the presence of high crime rates or drug markets or the
availability, or lack thereof, of social and treatment services—on parolees? Should
prison and parole authorities consider relocating released prisoners away from
communities with high levels of crime or other characteristics that impede desistance?
Should such relocation strategies be considered only for released prisoners who do not
have strong family or other social ties to their “home” communities? What would be the
effects of relocation?
Parolee Effects on Communities What are the effects of parolees on the crime
rates of the communities (neighborhoods and cities) to which they return after release
from prison? There are just two studies on the effects of released prisoners on state arrest
rates (Rosenfeld et al., 2005; Raphael and Stoll, 2004). Do the findings also apply to
local communities? Does the impact of parolees on local crime rates (if any) differ by
crime type (i.e., violent crime, property crime, drug crime)?

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Intervention Effects
Interventions can only be effective if they are affordable and can be implemented
competently. Moreover, most postrelease interventions are viewed as adding costs to an
already expensive system: thus, the cost of implementing reentry programs that build on
research or even of conducting the research itself creates a formidable obstacle to the
kinds of changes we propose. Yet a number of studies have shown that these costs are far
lower than the incarceration costs that are currently being incurred by parolees who have
been returned to prison and are expected in the future (Aos et al., 2001; Castellano and
Riker, 2001). In 2007, a new report from the Pew Foundation (2007) forecasts that state
and federal prison populations will grow by more than 192,000 inmates: these prisoners
alone could cost as much as $27.5 billion in new operating and construction costs.
The new costs will not be evenly distributed across states. For example, 18
percent of all parolees in the United States are in California (Zhang et al., 2006).
Moreover, a higher proportion of inmates in the future are likely to be female or elderly;
both groups have special needs and higher costs. Enhanced penalties for certain kinds of
offenders promise to raise costs as well. The committee believes that developing strong
reentry programs that lower reoffending, rearrest, and reincarceration rates is critical to
lowering these costs. Research on interventions should include cost effectiveness studies
and should suggest how cost savings in terms of reduced prison costs could be realized.
Effects of Prerelease Planning What kinds of reentry issues and problems are
considered when developing the prerelease plan? How can needs be prioritized to
prevent early failure or death? How well are prerelease plans followed by the parole
officer and releasee over the course of the parole period? How do prerelease plans
interact with availability and accessibility of services?
Effects of Parole Prior efforts to improve parole programs have neglected one of
the core functions—the role of the parole or probation supervision officer. Solomon and
her colleagues (2005) have shown that formal parole supervision has limited effects:
Why, then, are the recidivism effects of parole greater for some groups than for others?
What is the role of agency culture and parole officers’ orientation and training? What is
the contribution of a community’s capacity (e.g., program availability, resources) to
foster desistance? What kinds of parole officer training are required when implementing
new approaches or managing individualized re-entry plans for releasees?
Designing Interventions Given the heterogeneity of the parolee population, what
can be done to ensure that parolees are appropriately matched with specific interventions?
Are there general programs (e.g., education and literacy programs, family-focused
supervision) that are effective with all parolees? How effective in reducing recidivism
and increasing desistance from crime are “triage” approaches that concentrate services
and treatments on lower risk parolees and intensify supervision for higher risk released
prisoners? How effective are strength-based approaches in increasing desistance from
crime?
Timing Interventions Recent research on how the timing of surveillance,
supervision, and services affect recidivism and desistance needs to be replicated and
extended. Which interventions are most effective when introduced immediately after
release from prison? Would it be better to begin certain reentry services and treatments
prior to release from prison? If so, at what point during imprisonment should such

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interventions begin (e.g., a year before release, 6 months, 3 months)? How should they be
connected to interventions in the community?
Comprehensive Approaches Do comprehensive, multilevel strategies (involving
community or organizational change) produce significant reductions in recidivism? What
types of community or organizational change are most effective?
Effects of Restrictions on Releasees How do policies that restrict the access of
released prisoners to public housing and other forms of public assistance—including
treatment services, educational benefits, and other resources—affect desistance from
crime?
Role of Technology How effective are technological innovations, such as
computerized reporting, electronic monitoring, and global positioning system (GPS)
monitoring, in improving compliance with parole requirements and desistance from
crime? For which offenders (e.g., sex offenders, gang members) is the technology
warranted? Are such innovations cost-effective when compared with the traditional
practices they supplement or replace?
Sanctions for Parole Violation Do stringent special conditions in parole
contracts cause parolees to fail? Are low-level sanctions, such as short stays in jail, for
violating the conditions of parole effective in reducing the commission of new crimes?
Should such sanctions be graduated in severity for subsequent violations, or are constant
sanctions as effective as graduated sanctions in maintaining compliance with parole
requirements and desistance from crime? What are the costs and benefits of alternative
policies for technical violation on the overall justice system, crime, and criminal
desistance?
Incentives for Parolees How can incentives be used along with negative
sanctions to ensure that released prisoners comply with parole requirements and to
encourage desistance from crime? What types of incentives (e.g., shortening the length
of parole, relaxation of certain requirements) are most effective? What is the benefit of
state issued ”certificates of rehabilitation” in fostering desistance?
System Incentives What types of incentives are most effective in improving the
morale and performance of parole officers and system response to released prisoners?
Would a regime that ties organizational rewards to improved monitoring, service
delivery, and compliance with parole requirements spur organizational innovation? Can
such a system increase desistance from crime by parolees in comparison with traditional
parole procedures and practices?
Measurement and Methods
Measurement Issues How valid are arrests, technical violations, and other
recidivism indicators as measures of desistance from crime among parolees? How well
do violations of the technical requirements of community supervision predict the
commission of new crimes? To what degree do recidivism measures, such as arrests,
confound criminal offending with the system response to offending? Are conventional
recidivism indicators more valid for some groups of parolees than others?
Methods As this review unmistakably demonstrates, the application of
scientifically rigorous methods in research and evaluation on community supervision has
not been the norm and is only now beginning to emerge. Inadequate implementation of

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program principles and procedures appears to be a significant obstacle in the way of
program effectiveness or of finding out whether a program might have benefits for
participants. A major limitation of current program evaluation results is the failure to
account fully for self-selection bias. Random assignment of persons to treatment and
control conditions remains rare in research on the reentry process. What kinds of
experimental evaluation and cost effectiveness studies could be designed and
implemented to address and improve this situation? What methods are most appropriate
and how can barriers to using them (i.e. implementation, security, or ethics issues) be
addressed and overcome?
RECOMMENDTION
The new work that confirms long-standing research findings on the high rates of
recidivism and the risk of death in the first weeks and months after release from prison
lead the committee to make a recommendation regarding policies and programs for
parolees and other releasees.
The committee recommends that parole authorities and
administrators of both in-prison and postrelease programs redesign
their activities and programs to provide major support to parolees
and other releasees at the time of release. These interventions should
be subjected to rigorous evaluation.
Given the paucity of rigorous evidence about the effectiveness of many
intervention programs or the motivation underlying individual change, the committee can
offer only limited advice about what specific form some of these programs should take.
Cognitive-behavioral approaches have strong scientific support and the committee
believes that they should be widely implemented and continually evaluated,
especially taking account of program implementation issues. Drug treatment coupled
with frequent testing for drug use also shows evidence of lowering recidivism. Several
other programs and approaches show promise in reducing violations of community
supervision requirements, arrests for new crimes, and drug use. Included here are
programs that focus on individual change and motivation, and comprehensive,
multiservice employment and training initiatives.
“Nothing works” is no longer a defensible conclusion from assessments of
program effects on reentry outcomes. When a person leaves prison it is clear that he or
she has needs an immediate place to live, a person such as a case manager to facilitate the
immediate transition from prison to the community, and a program to guide postrelease
life. However, we cannot identify with confidence other best practices for reducing
recidivism and enhancing desistance among people returning to local communities from
prison. Because so few reentry service programs are accompanied by rigorous
evaluations, a scientific review panel, such as this committee, has very little to draw on
with confidence (see National Research Council, 1979, for a history of this problem). Yet
there is a great deal of experiential and practitioner knowledge with regard to the
apparent efficacy of various programs (Wilkinson, 2004). The challenge over the next

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decade, as prisoner reentry, parole, and desistance from crime become even more
important, is to subject these promising practices to rigorously designed evaluations.

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Appendix A
Workshop Agenda

Wednesday, January 18, 2006
8:30 – 8:45 am

WELCOMING REMARKS AND INTRODUCTIONS
Carol Petrie
Director, Committee on Law and Justice
James Q. Wilson, Committee Chair
Emeritus, University of California Los Angeles

8:45 – 9:05

Issues in Re-entry Research for NIJ
Glenn Schmitt (invited)
Acting Director, NIJ

9:05 – 9:30

Overview of Issues and Workshop Goals
Joan Petersilia
Committee on Community Supervision and Desistance
from Crime
University of California, Irvine

9:30 – 11:00

Community Supervision Current Practice
From: Rethinking Rehabilitation: Why Can’t We Reform
Our Criminals
David Farabee
University of California Los Angeles
Discussants
Michael Jacobsen, Executive Director
Vera Institute of Justice
Martin Horn
Commissioner
New York City Department of Corrections

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General Discussion
11:00—11:15
11:15 – 12:45 pm

Break
Therapeutic Models of Community Supervision
Efficacy of the Proactive Model of Supervision
Faye Taxman
Virginia Commonwealth University
Discussants
Shadd Maruno
Queens College, Belfast
(Need a practitioner here)

12:45 – 1:30

Lunch

1:30—3:00

Re-Entry: The Judicial Model
The Role of Problem Solving Courts
David B. Wexler J.D.
University of Arizona and University
Of Puerto Rico
Discussants
Hon Cindy Lederman
Administrative Judge
Eleventh Judicial Circuit
Juvenile Division
Miami-Dade County, Florida
Jennifer Skeem (invited)
UC Irvine
General Discussion

3:00 – 3:15
3:15 – 4:30

BREAK
The Way Forward
What Would an Ideal System Look Like?
Pamela Lattimore
University of South Carolina

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Discussants
Mark Kleiman
University of California, Los Angeles
Sharon Neumann
Deputy Director
Oklahoma Department of Corrections
4:30 – 5:00

Wrap-Up
Jeremy Travis
President, John Jay College
New York, NY

5:00

Adjourn

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APPENDIX B
Biographical Sketches of Committee Members and Staff
Joan Petersilia (Cochair) is a professor of criminology, law, and society in the School of
Social Ecology and directly of the Center for Evidence-Based Corrections at the
University of California at Irvine. Previously, she was director of the criminal justice
program at RAND and has directed major studies in policing, sentencing, career
criminals, juvenile justice, corrections, and racial discrimination. Her current work
focuses on parole and prisoner reintegration. She has served as president of both the
American Society of Criminology and of the Association of Criminal Justice Research in
California, and she is an elected fellow of both the American Society of Criminology and
the National Academy of Public Administration. She has a B.A. degree in sociology
from Loyola University, an M.A. degree in sociology from Ohio State University, and a
Ph.D. degree in criminology from the University of California at Irvine.
Richard Rosenfeld (Cochair) is professor of criminology and criminal justice at the
University of Missouri-St. Louis. He is coauthor with Steven F. Messner of Crime and
the American Dream (Wadsworth) and has written extensively on the social sources of
violent crime. His current research focuses on the effects of economic conditions on
crime trends. Rosenfeld is a fellow of the American Society of Criminology.
Richard J. Bonnie is John S. Battle professor of law, professor of psychiatric medicine,
and director of the Institute of Law, Psychiatry, and Public Policy at the University of
Virginia. His work focuses on criminal law and law relating to mental health, substance
abuse, and public health. His many public service activities have included serving as
secretary of the first National Advisory Council on Drug Abuse, chair of Virginia’s State
Human Rights Committee, and, currently, chair of the Commission on Mental Health
Law Reform established by the chief justice of Virginia. Bonnie is a recipient of the Ray
Award of the American Psychiatric Association and a special presidential commendation
for his contributions to American psychiatry. He is a member of the Institution of
Medicine of the National Academies and received its Yarmolinsky Medal for his
contributions to the institutions.
Robert D. Crutchfield is professor and Clarence and Elissa Schrag fellow in the
Department of Sociology at the University of Washington. His current research focuses
on social inequality as a cause of crime and racial inequality in the criminal justice
system. Prior to his academic career, he was a juvenile probation officer and an adult
parole officer in Pennsylvania. He also served on the Washington State Juvenile
Sentencing Commission. He is a past vice president of the American Society of
Criminology and is the coeditor of the third edition of Crime: Readings.
Eugenia Grohman (Staff Officer) is associate executive director of the Division of
Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education at the National Research Council, with

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primary responsibility for the review, editing, publication, and release of the division's
reports. She served as study director for the Panel on Data Access for Research Purposes
for the last stages of its work, and she has worked on many division reports, including
Measuring Poverty: A New Approach; How People Learn; Understanding Risk; High
Stakes: Testing for Tracking, Promotion, and Graduation; and A Common Destiny:
Blacks and American Society. Previously, she worked as a program and budget analyst in
the federal government and in politics.
Mark A.R. Kleiman is professor of public policy at the School of Public Affairs of the
University of California at Los Angeles where he teaches methods of policy analysis, and
drug abuse and crime control policy. His primary research interests are drug abuse and
crime control, with special attention to illicit markets and the design of deterrent regimes,
and including simulation modeling of deterrence strategies and empirical work on the
management of drug-involved offenders on probation and parole. Previously, he worked
at the U.S. Department of Justice, the Office of Management and Budget for the city of
Boston, the Polaroid Corporation, and for U.S. Representative Les Aspin. He is the
author of Marijuana: Costs of Abuse, Costs of Control and Against Excess: Drug Policy
for Results.
John H. Laub is professor in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice and
an affiliate faculty member in the Department of Sociology at the University of Maryland
and a visiting scholar at the Institute for Quantitative Social Science at Harvard
University. He is a fellow of the American Society of Criminology and has served as its
president, and in 2005 he received its Edwin H. Sutherland Award. His areas of research
include crime and deviance over the life course, juvenile delinquency and juvenile
justice, and the history of criminology. Two of his books, coauthored with Robert
Sampson, Crime in the Making: Pathways and Turning Points Through Life and Shared
Beginnings, Divergent Lives: Delinquent Boys to Age 70, have won several major
awards.
Carol Petrie (Study Director) is director of the Committee on Law and Justice, a
standing committee at the National Research Council. She develops and supervises a
wide range of projects on the nature of crime and crime prevention and control.
Previously, she was director of planning and management at the National Institute of
Justice (NIJ) of the U.S. Department of Justice, working in the area of criminal justice
research, statistics, and public policy. She was also a senior project officer at NIJ and
served as its acting director in 1994. She has conducted research on violence and
managed numerous research projects on the operations of the criminal justice system.
Christy A. Visher is principal research associate with the Justice Policy Center at the
Urban Institute in Washington, D.C. Previously, she was science adviser to the director
of the National Institute of Justice, the research arm of the U.S. Department of Justice.
Her research focuses on criminal careers, communities and crime, and the evaluation of
strategies for crime control and prevention. She is coeditor with Jeremy Travis of
Prisoner Reentry and Crime in America and the author of several recent publications on
prisoner reintegration.

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