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Inmates Re-Entering In Prison Research Paper

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Over 700,000 inmates are released from state and federal prisons and put back on the streets. Over half of them end up back in the system (Cook, Kang, Braga, Ludwig, O’Brien (2015)). They end up back into the system because they can’t fend for themselves, don’t have family left or go back into the drugs and alcohol or what they were doing before. Re-entering into society can be hard, specifically talking about offenders who have been incarcerated for years. Those that are up for release and those who have been released have trouble finding a job or even getting a job. Being in a jail or prison cell is hard enough, let alone trying to re-enter society after many years behind bars. For some inmates, it is easy because they have family still in the area or those willing to come from far away to take them back home. Inmates re-entering into society have a lot of work to do starting with themselves. Male and female inmates have different recidivism rates and females have more access to re-entry programs than males do.
Inmates who are up for release or those who have been released, don’t know what to do with themselves because all they have known is a jail cell. They have been incarcerated for many years and have not learned how to deal with an addiction they might have had, or what they can do for work. For many …show more content…

Phase one is after six months and phase two is twenty-four months. Phase one is where the inmate is put into the program they need prior to release. Phase two is when the inmate is released and continues into the community for six months. For males, 122 go back into prison and for females, 31 go back. As a whole, .82% go back into prison after six months, after twenty-four months, 2.33% end back up in prison (Severson, Veeh, Bruns, and Lee (2012)). Many of the inmates who go back to prison is because they have failed a UA (urinary analysis) or that they have a new conviction that brought them back into

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