About the Report of the Re-Entry Council

7: Educating the Public about the Re-Entry Population

Educate the public about the risks posed by and the needs of the re-entry population, and the benefits of successful initiatives to public safety and the community in general.

Overview

Policymakers, practitioners, and advocates spearheading a re-entry initiative face a public that does not necessarily appreciate that incarcerating people longer is not a viable solution. This policy statement discusses some (but by no means all of the possible) strategies to pre-empt opposition to a re-entry initiative and to cultivate public support for it. It also provides illustrations of how these strategies can be implemented.

Recommendations

  1. Reassure the public that people who present a risk to the community are supervised upon their release, and reincarcerated when appropriate for failures to comply with their conditions of release.
  2. Make clear that prolonging the incarceration of every prisoner or returning every violator of probation or parole to prison or jail is neither good policy nor fiscally responsible.
  3. Inform the public about the large and growing number of people with criminal records in the community.
  4. Help the public appreciate that preparing people in prison or jail for their release and providing support to them upon their return makes families and communities stronger, safer, and healthier.
  1. Peter D. Hart Research Associates, Inc., "Changing Public Attitudes toward the Criminal Justice System," telephone survey of 1,056 US adults and six focus groups (Open Society Institute: May-December 2001). back

 Our Publications

10/23/2008: New Toolkit on Law Enforcement Role in Prisoner Reentry: Four Agencies Selected as "Learning Sites" with Justice Department Grant

The Council of State Governments (CSG) Justice Center announced today the release of the toolkit, Planning and Assessing a Law Enforcement Reentry Strategy. With support by the U.S. Department of Justice Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS), the kit has been designed as a guide and self-assessment tool for policing personnel and their partners to help reduce repeat crimes and facilitate successful reintegration by the more than 700,000 individuals who return to our communities from prisons each year and the more than 9 million from jails.

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