Nearly 600,000 people are released from state and federal prisons annually. Whether these individuals will successfully reintegrate into their communities has been identified as a critical measure of the effectiveness of the criminal legal system. However, evaluating the successful reentry of individuals released from prison is a challenging process, particularly given limitations of currently available data and the complex set of factors that shape reentry experiences. The Limits of Recidivism: Measuring Success After Prison finds that the current measures of success for individuals released from prison are inadequate. The use of recidivism rates to evaluate post-release success ignores significant research on how and why individuals cease to commit crimes, as well as the important role of structural factors in shaping post-release outcomes. The emphasis on recidivism as the primary metric to evaluate post-release success also ignores
ISBN: | 9780309276979 |
Publication date: | 1st September 2022 |
Author: | Engineering, and Medicine US National Academies of Sciences |
Publisher: | National Academies Press an imprint of The National Academies Press |
Format: | Paperback |
Series: | A Consensus Study Report |
Genres: |
Crime and criminology |