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Crime and Justice

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The criminal justice system's actions in both preventing and responding to criminal behavior have implications for the safety, well-being, and financial stability of communities throughout the country.

Policing practices may prevent crime, but can also increase the number of people housed in what are often already overcrowded jails and prisons. These facilities remove potentially dangerous offenders from the community, but if those who are incarcerated are not offered treatment and services to successfully reenter society, they may cause more harm upon release. And victims of crime can be subject to further victimization in the absence of a support system.

In an era of diminishing state and federal budgets and limited resources for community services, it is critical that research and analysis is available to guide the allocation of scarce criminal justice resources in a manner that yields the most beneficial impact on the individuals and jurisdictions affected by crime.

Researchers in the Urban Institute's Justice Policy Center produce such research, evaluating programs and analyzing data in an effort to guide federal, state, and local stakeholders in making sound decisions that will increase the safety of communities nationwide.

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The Corporation for Supportive Housing's Returning Home Initiative: System Change Accomplishments after Three Years (Policy Briefs)
Martha R. Burt, Jocelyn Fontaine, Caterina Gouvis Roman

In 2006, the Corporation for Supportive Housing launched its Returning Home Initiative (RHI) with two goals: 1) to establish permanent supportive housing as an essential reentry component for formerly incarcerated persons with histories of homelessness, mental illness, and chronic health conditions; and 2) to promote local and national policy changes to integrate the corrections, housing, mental health, and human service systems. The Urban Institute assessed the process of system change stimulated by RHI activities in New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago—three communities receiving significant RHI investment. This brief summarizes the influence of RHI-funded activities in each of these cities.

Posted to Web: February 08, 2010Publication Date: November 01, 2009

Release Planning for Successful Reentry: A Self-Assessment Tool for Corrections (Research Report)
Robin Halberstadt, Nancy G. La Vigne

This self-assessment tool is designed to aid correctional administrators in evaluating and improving their release planning practices. With funding from the Annie E. Casey Foundation and in partnership with the Wisconsin Department of Corrections, Urban Institute staff developed and piloted a monthly assessment tool for individual correctional institutions and a yearly assessment tool for correctional agencies to monitor overall departmental performance. The policies and procedures identified as best practices in the tool are drawn from Release Planning for Successful Reentry: A Guide for Corrections, Service Providers, and Community Groups.

Posted to Web: January 29, 2010Publication Date: January 28, 2010

An Evolving Field: Findings from the 2008 Parole Practices Survey (Research Report)
Jesse Jannetta, Brian Elderbroom, Amy L. Solomon, Meagan Cahill, Barbara Parthasarathy, William D. Burrell

Parole supervision has been a somewhat overlooked field in recent years, even as the challenges of prisoner reentry have attracted increasing attention. Parole supervision can and should play an important role in facilitating successful reentry, yet parole agencies must systematically adopt the practices and policies that have been demonstrated to work. To examine the current state of parole practice, the Urban Institute conducted a survey of parole supervision field offices. The findings of the survey are summarized in this report, and suggest that the principles of effective supervision are beginning to take root.

Posted to Web: January 08, 2010Publication Date: December 01, 2009

Intentions and Results: A Look Back at the Adoption and Safe Families Act (Research Report)
Olivia Golden, Jennifer Ehrle Macomber, Additional Authors

The Adoption and Safe Families Act (ASFA), signed into law on November 19, 1997, was the most significant piece of legislation dealing with child welfare in almost twenty years. The ambitious new law aimed to reaffirm the focus on child safety in case decision making and to ensure that children did not grow up in foster care but instead were connected with permanent families. Twelve years after the law was enacted, the Center for the Study of Social Policy (CSSP) in partnership with the Urban Institute co-sponsored this series of papers to examine effects of the ASFA law and its implementation.

Posted to Web: December 11, 2009Publication Date: December 10, 2009

The First Line of Defense: Reducing Recidivism at the Local Level: Hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee on Crime and Drugs (Testimony)
Amy L. Solomon

The traditional approach to incarceration is to keep inmates locked up—away from society—to keep us safe. With little treatment and transition planning, most individuals are released with the same problems that got them locked up in the first place. In the past decade, we have realized that almost everyone who is incarcerated will eventually return home; this is especially true of the jail population. The big question: how do we incarcerate and release individuals in a way that makes them less likely to reoffend and more likely to work, support their families, pay taxes, and be productive members of society?

Posted to Web: November 05, 2009Publication Date: November 05, 2009

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