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Date: April 30, 2024 Tue

Time: 1:51 am

Results for employment and crime (washington)

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Author: Evans, Michael

Title: Does Participation in Washington's Correctional Industries Increase Employment and Reduce Recidivism?

Summary: Substantial barriers to legal employment exist for former prison offenders after their release. Finding a job with a livable wage and keeping the job are more difficult due to their previous criminal histories and lower education levels compared to the general population; however, 40.1 percent of offenders participating in the Correctional Industries (CI) were employed one year after release in 2007 and recidivated at a rate of 34.5 percent. In contrast, offenders with similar demographic characteristics who were not in CI were employed at 29.1 percent one year after release and had a 45 percent recidivism rate. Holding a job is an important signal that an individual is moving toward a crime-free life. Not only are these individuals working and crime-free, they are also taxpayers and consumers who help the local economies grow.

Details: Washington: Washington State Department of Corrections, 2011. 12p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed March 11, 2012 at http://www.doc.wa.gov/aboutdoc/.../CIEmploymentRecidivism2011.docx

Year: 2011

Country: United States

URL: http://www.doc.wa.gov/aboutdoc/.../CIEmploymentRecidivism2011.docx

Shelf Number: 124468

Keywords:
Employment and Crime (Washington)
Recidivism (Washington)
Vocational Education and Training (Washington)