Beyond Basic Needs: Social Support and Structure for Successful Offender Reentry

  • Denney A
  • Tewksbury R
  • Jones R
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Abstract

Barriers to successful reentry have long been identified as impeding an offender’s ability to successfully reenter society upon release from incarceration. As a result, research has long examined what shared obstacles the majority of offenders often face upon reentering society. Much of the research identifies factors such as poor education, obtaining/maintaining employment, stable housing, and transportation as common barriers to successful reentry. By using in-depth interviews with ex-offenders deemed as successful that were conducted by two respective non-profit agencies, the present study explores what significant requirements, if any, successful offenders perceive to need and/or have experienced as lacking while attempting to successfully reenter society. Findings from this study highlight that many of the research- identified needs are not major barriers because they are often provided for by various non-profit agencies. Furthermore, successful ex-offenders overwhelmingly identify poor social support as a major barrier that oftentimes remains neglected in government and non-profit organizational programming.

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APA

Denney, A. S., Tewksbury, R., & Jones, R. S. (2014). Beyond Basic Needs: Social Support and Structure for Successful Offender Reentry. Journal of Qualitative Criminal Justice & Criminology. https://doi.org/10.21428/88de04a1.d95029f6

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