Description

Book Synopsis

This groundbreaking edited volume evaluates prisoner reentry using a critical approach to demonstrate how the many issues surrounding reentry do not merely intersect but are in fact reinforcing and interdependent. The number of former incarcerated persons with a felony conviction living in the United States has grown significantly in the last decade, reaching into the millions. When men and women are released from prison, their journey encompasses a range of challenges that are unique to each individual, including physical and mental illnesses, substance abuse, gender identity, complicated family dynamics, the denial of rights, and the inability to voice their experiences about returning home.

Although scholars focus on the obstacles former prisoners encounter and how to reduce recidivism rates, the main challenge of prisoner reentry is how multiple interdependent issues overlap in complex ways. By examining prisoner reentry from various critical perspectives, this volume dep

Table of Contents

List of Tables

List of Contributors

Introduction: Critical Reentry in the 21st Century

KEESHA M. MIDDLEMASS AND CALVINJOHN SMILEY

SECTION I

Institutions, Community, and Reentry

1 Halfway Home: The Thin Line Between Abstinence and the Drug Crisis

LIAM MARTIN

2 Triaging Rehabilitation: The Retreat of State-Funded Prison Programming

ALLISON GORGA

3 The State’s Accomplices? Organizations and the Penal State

NICOLE KAUFMAN

4 Idaho: A Case Study in Rural Reentry

DEIRDRE CAPUTO-LEVINE

5 Life Courses of Sex and Violent Offenders After Prison Release: The Interaction Between Individual- and Community-Related Factors

GUNDA WOESSNER, KIRA-SOPHIE GAUDER, AND DAVID CZUDNOCHOWSKI

SECTION II

Health, Embodiment, and Reentry

6 Mothers Returning Home: A Critical Intersectional Approach to Reentry

REBECCA REVIERE, VERNETTA D. YOUNG, AND AKIV DAWSON

7 Release From Long-Term Restrictive Housing

LINDA CARSON

8 Resilient Roads and the Non-Prison Model for Women

L. SUSAN WILLIAMS, EDWARD L. W. GREEN, AND KATRINA M. LEWIS

9 Alcohol Use Disorder: Programs and Treatment for Offenders Reentering the Community

SARA BUCK DOUDE AND JESSICA J. SPARKS

10 Carceral Calisthenics: (Body) Building a Resilient Self and Transformative Reentry Movement

ALBERT DE LA TIERRA

SECTION III

Gender, Criminality, and Reentry

11 Black Women Excluded From Protection and Criminalized for Their Existence

KEESHA M. MIDDLEMASS

12 The Gendered Challenges of Prisoner Reentry

HALEY ZETTLER

13 An Intersectional Criminology Analysis of Black Women’s Collective Resistance

NISHAUN T. BATTLE AND JASON M. WILLIAMS

14 Gender Differences in Programmatic Needs for Juveniles

LAURIN PARKER AND KYLIE PARROTTA

15 Prison Is a Place to Teach Us the Things We’ve Never Learned in Life

BREEA WILLINGHAM

SECTION IV

Access, Rights, and Reentry

16 “. . . Except Sex Offenders”: Registering Sexual Harm in the Age of #MeToo

DAVID BOOTH

17 Reentry in the Inland Empire: The Prison to College Pipeline With Project Rebound

ANNIKA YVETTE ANDERSON, PAUL ANDREW JONES, AND CAROLYN ANNE MCALLISTER

18 The Politics of Restoring Voting Rights After Incarceration

TANEISHA N. MEANS AND ALEXANDRA HATCH

19 Restoration of Voting Rights: Returning Citizensand the Florida Electorate

KENESHIA GRANT

20 Perpetual Punishment: One Man’s Journey Post-Incarceration

TOMAS R. MONTALVO AND JENNIFER MARIE ORTIZ

SECTION V

Voices, Agency, and Reentry

21 Thoughts, Concerns, and the Reality of Incarcerated Women

CALVINJOHN SMILEY AND KEESHA M. MIDDLEMASS

22 Reflections on Reentry: Voices From the ID13 Prison Literacy Project

HALLE M. NEIDERMAN, CHRISTOPHER P. DUM, AND THE ID13 PRISON LITERACY PROJECT

23 Being Held at Rikers, Waiting to Go Upstate

MARQUES M.

24 Reentry, From My Perspective

ABDUL-HALIM N. SHAHID

25 The Journey of a Black Man Enveloped in Poverty

STEVEN PACHECO

26 My First 24 Hours After Being Released

JOSE LUMBRERAS

SECTION VI

Activism, Liberation, and Reentry

27 Money for Freedom: Cash Bail, Incarceration, and Reentry

CALVINJOHN SMILEY

28 Agents of Change in Healing Our Communities

LIZA CHOWDHURY, JASON DAVIS, AND DEDRIC “BELOVED” HAMMOND

29 Rehabilitation Is Reentry: Breathing Space, a Product of Inmate Dreams

ROBERT GAROT

30 Making Good One Semester at a Time: Formerly Incarcerated Students (and Their Professor) Consider the Redemptive Power of Inclusive Education

JAMES M. BINNALL, IRENE SOTELO, ADRIAN VASQUEZ, AND JOE LOUIS HERNANDEZ

31 “I Can’t Depend on No Reentry Program!”: Street-Identified Black Men’s Critical Reflections on Prison Reentry

YASSER ARAFAT PAYNE, TARA MARIE BROWN, AND CORRY WRIGHT

Conclusion: What’s Next for Critical Reentry

CALVINJOHN SMILEY AND KEESHA M. MIDDLEMASS

Index

Prisoner Reentry in the 21st Century

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A Hardback by Keesha M. Middlemass, CalvinJohn Smiley

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    View other formats and editions of Prisoner Reentry in the 21st Century by Keesha M. Middlemass

    Publisher: Taylor & Francis
    Publication Date: 11/21/2019 12:00:00 AM
    ISBN13: 9780815352754, 978-0815352754
    ISBN10: 0815352751

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    This groundbreaking edited volume evaluates prisoner reentry using a critical approach to demonstrate how the many issues surrounding reentry do not merely intersect but are in fact reinforcing and interdependent. The number of former incarcerated persons with a felony conviction living in the United States has grown significantly in the last decade, reaching into the millions. When men and women are released from prison, their journey encompasses a range of challenges that are unique to each individual, including physical and mental illnesses, substance abuse, gender identity, complicated family dynamics, the denial of rights, and the inability to voice their experiences about returning home.

    Although scholars focus on the obstacles former prisoners encounter and how to reduce recidivism rates, the main challenge of prisoner reentry is how multiple interdependent issues overlap in complex ways. By examining prisoner reentry from various critical perspectives, this volume dep

    Table of Contents

    List of Tables

    List of Contributors

    Introduction: Critical Reentry in the 21st Century

    KEESHA M. MIDDLEMASS AND CALVINJOHN SMILEY

    SECTION I

    Institutions, Community, and Reentry

    1 Halfway Home: The Thin Line Between Abstinence and the Drug Crisis

    LIAM MARTIN

    2 Triaging Rehabilitation: The Retreat of State-Funded Prison Programming

    ALLISON GORGA

    3 The State’s Accomplices? Organizations and the Penal State

    NICOLE KAUFMAN

    4 Idaho: A Case Study in Rural Reentry

    DEIRDRE CAPUTO-LEVINE

    5 Life Courses of Sex and Violent Offenders After Prison Release: The Interaction Between Individual- and Community-Related Factors

    GUNDA WOESSNER, KIRA-SOPHIE GAUDER, AND DAVID CZUDNOCHOWSKI

    SECTION II

    Health, Embodiment, and Reentry

    6 Mothers Returning Home: A Critical Intersectional Approach to Reentry

    REBECCA REVIERE, VERNETTA D. YOUNG, AND AKIV DAWSON

    7 Release From Long-Term Restrictive Housing

    LINDA CARSON

    8 Resilient Roads and the Non-Prison Model for Women

    L. SUSAN WILLIAMS, EDWARD L. W. GREEN, AND KATRINA M. LEWIS

    9 Alcohol Use Disorder: Programs and Treatment for Offenders Reentering the Community

    SARA BUCK DOUDE AND JESSICA J. SPARKS

    10 Carceral Calisthenics: (Body) Building a Resilient Self and Transformative Reentry Movement

    ALBERT DE LA TIERRA

    SECTION III

    Gender, Criminality, and Reentry

    11 Black Women Excluded From Protection and Criminalized for Their Existence

    KEESHA M. MIDDLEMASS

    12 The Gendered Challenges of Prisoner Reentry

    HALEY ZETTLER

    13 An Intersectional Criminology Analysis of Black Women’s Collective Resistance

    NISHAUN T. BATTLE AND JASON M. WILLIAMS

    14 Gender Differences in Programmatic Needs for Juveniles

    LAURIN PARKER AND KYLIE PARROTTA

    15 Prison Is a Place to Teach Us the Things We’ve Never Learned in Life

    BREEA WILLINGHAM

    SECTION IV

    Access, Rights, and Reentry

    16 “. . . Except Sex Offenders”: Registering Sexual Harm in the Age of #MeToo

    DAVID BOOTH

    17 Reentry in the Inland Empire: The Prison to College Pipeline With Project Rebound

    ANNIKA YVETTE ANDERSON, PAUL ANDREW JONES, AND CAROLYN ANNE MCALLISTER

    18 The Politics of Restoring Voting Rights After Incarceration

    TANEISHA N. MEANS AND ALEXANDRA HATCH

    19 Restoration of Voting Rights: Returning Citizensand the Florida Electorate

    KENESHIA GRANT

    20 Perpetual Punishment: One Man’s Journey Post-Incarceration

    TOMAS R. MONTALVO AND JENNIFER MARIE ORTIZ

    SECTION V

    Voices, Agency, and Reentry

    21 Thoughts, Concerns, and the Reality of Incarcerated Women

    CALVINJOHN SMILEY AND KEESHA M. MIDDLEMASS

    22 Reflections on Reentry: Voices From the ID13 Prison Literacy Project

    HALLE M. NEIDERMAN, CHRISTOPHER P. DUM, AND THE ID13 PRISON LITERACY PROJECT

    23 Being Held at Rikers, Waiting to Go Upstate

    MARQUES M.

    24 Reentry, From My Perspective

    ABDUL-HALIM N. SHAHID

    25 The Journey of a Black Man Enveloped in Poverty

    STEVEN PACHECO

    26 My First 24 Hours After Being Released

    JOSE LUMBRERAS

    SECTION VI

    Activism, Liberation, and Reentry

    27 Money for Freedom: Cash Bail, Incarceration, and Reentry

    CALVINJOHN SMILEY

    28 Agents of Change in Healing Our Communities

    LIZA CHOWDHURY, JASON DAVIS, AND DEDRIC “BELOVED” HAMMOND

    29 Rehabilitation Is Reentry: Breathing Space, a Product of Inmate Dreams

    ROBERT GAROT

    30 Making Good One Semester at a Time: Formerly Incarcerated Students (and Their Professor) Consider the Redemptive Power of Inclusive Education

    JAMES M. BINNALL, IRENE SOTELO, ADRIAN VASQUEZ, AND JOE LOUIS HERNANDEZ

    31 “I Can’t Depend on No Reentry Program!”: Street-Identified Black Men’s Critical Reflections on Prison Reentry

    YASSER ARAFAT PAYNE, TARA MARIE BROWN, AND CORRY WRIGHT

    Conclusion: What’s Next for Critical Reentry

    CALVINJOHN SMILEY AND KEESHA M. MIDDLEMASS

    Index

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