Slashdot Mirror


'Prisonized' Neighborhoods Make Recidivism More Likely

sciencehabit writes: One of the most important questions relating to incarceration and rehabilitation is how to discourage recidivism. After a prison stint, about half of convicts wind up back in the slammer within three years. But sociologist David Kirk noticed a pattern: convicts who moved away from their old neighborhood when released from prison had a much smaller recidivism rate. Kirk found that the concentration of former prisoners in a neighborhood had a dramatic effect on the likelihood of committing another offense (abstract). "So if an ex-con’s average chance of returning to prison after just 1 year was 22%—as it was in 2006—an additional new parolee in the neighborhood boosted that chance to nearly 25%. The numbers climb for each new parolee added. In some of the most affected neighborhoods—where five of every thousand residents were recent parolees—nearly 35% were back behind bars within a year of getting out." The rates stayed consistent even when controlling for chronic poverty and other neighborhood characteristics.

2 of 164 comments (clear)

  1. If movies have ever taught me anything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    it's that the guy that landed you in jail while he got away free is going to get you into trouble again

  2. Re:So the people you are around by PPH · · Score: 5, Funny

    really do make a difference..

    Yes, they do.

    Move the ex-cons into my neighborhood, full of investment bankers and corporate executives. And they'll learn how not to get caught.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.