Prisoner Reentry: Reclaiming the Challenge
Professionals Often Have Criminal Justice Backgrounds
Social work is well-suited to addressing the needs of reentering
prisoners.
By Lyn Stoesen, News Staff
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| Illustration: John Michael
Yanson |
More than 600,000 people are released from prison in the United
States each year, and a great many of them return to their families
and communities with complex and challenging needs. Prisoners
reentering society are often suffering from substance use problems,
mental illnesses and health concerns. They must navigate social
service systems to find housing, jobs and support. And too often,
recently released prisoners find themselves once again incarcerated.
Melvin Wilson, manager of NASW's Center for Workforce Studies,
said that in recent years there has been increasing attention
to prisoner reentry and the need to develop systems and programs
to help people navigate their return.
"Recidivism rates are high," Wilson said. "Data
show large numbers of people with a history of abuse of alcohol
and other drugs, low education and limited employment skills,
family dysfunction and homelessness reentering communities. There
is a growing recognition that we need programs to target these
issues," Wilson said.
The federal government has begun to address reentry concerns.
The focus of the government effort has been to fund programs to
help reduce re-arrest and recidivism and increase public safety,
as well as help returning prisoners integrate into their communities.
The Serious and Violent Offender Reentry Initiative was developed
by the U.S. Department of Justice to help communities "ensure
public safety and reduce victimization by helping returning offenders
become productive members of their communities, providing education,
job and life skills training, and substance abuse treatment."
In 2004, during his State of the Union address, President George
W. Bush announced a four-year Prisoner Reentry Initiative to help
inmates find work when they return to their communities by providing
funding to faith-based and community organizations. The president's
initiative identified "three key requirements for successful
reentry": employment, transitional housing, and mentoring.
But Wilson noted that many of these programs are based in the
criminal justice system and faith-based organizations, rather
than in professional social work services. "While criminal
justice and faith communities have experience and an investment
in working with these communities, we must begin to more thoroughly
integrate social work into reentry programs," he said. "The
social work person-in-environment perspective is extremely well-suited
to addressing the complex and challenging needs of the returning
population."
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From June 2006 NASW News. © 2006 National
Association of Social Workers. All Rights Reserved. NASW News
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