Home » Poverty and Economic Stability » Promote Workforce Strategies for Reintegrating Ex-Offenders » Strategies

Strategies

Enhance Workforce Preparation During Incarceration

What Can Policymakers Do?


[1] Bard College (2010) Bard Prison Initiative.

[2] CLASP (2008) Every Door Closed. Barred from Jobs: Ex-Offenders Thwarted in Attempts to Earn a Living. Available online.

[3] Steurer, S. J., Smith, L. G., Correctional Education Association (U.S.), & Management & Training Corporation. (2003). Education reduces crime: Three-state recidivism study: executive summary. Lanham, MD: Correctional Education Association.

money
The Washington State Institute for Public Policy rigorously analyzed data on hundreds of programs aimed at reducing crime. It found that education programs in prison reduce crime by 4 to 9 percent and produce a net benefit to taxpayers of $2,000 to $6,000 per participant.

The most
rigorous study of specific state outcomes which concluded that inmates who attended educational programs in prison were 29 percent less likely to be re-incarated.

highlight
The Bard Prison Initiative (BPI) is restoring opportunities for higher education in New York prisons. Bard provides secondary education inside three long-term, maximum-security prisons and two transitional medium-security prisons.