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  1. Mar 20, 2020 · We find that better physical health while in prison as well as gains in physical health post-release are associated with a higher odds of recidivating in general. For mental health, conversely, better health in prison is related to lower recidivism odds outside of prison.

  2. Jul 22, 2022 · The definition (i.e., new offense/rearrest, adjudication, or re-incarceration/commitment), the length of the tracking period, and youth characteristics used influence recidivism rates differently.

    • 10.1177/0093854820922891
    • 2020/09
  3. Mar 1, 2017 · Many children of incarcerated parents face profound adversity — as do other children facing many of the same risk factors the children experienced prior to parental incarceration. But the research shows that some children develop resilience despite the risks if they have a strong social support system. [31]

  4. Jul 9, 2020 · Traditionally, scholars include the following ten ACEs: physical abuse, emotional abuse, sexual abuse, physical neglect, emotional neglect, household substance abuse, violent treatment toward mother, parental separation or divorce, household mental illness, and having a household member with incarceration history ( National Center for Injury Pre...

    • Jessica M. Craig, Haley R. Zettler
    • 2021
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  6. Mar 1, 2023 · Incarceration does not reduce delinquent behavior. State-level data on recidivism consistently show that youth who are released from correctional confinement experience high rates of rearrest, new adjudications (in juvenile court) or convictions (in adult court), and reincarceration.

    • Richard Mendel
  7. Both types of studies are designed to account for selection bias in nonexperimental estimates of the impact of incarceration on reoffending. Most such studies find that the experience of postconviction imprisonment has little impact on the probability of recidivism.

  8. Mar 29, 2018 · The UCLA researchers reported that more than 21 percent of people who had been incarcerated as children reported poor general health in adulthood, compared with 13 percent for those incarcerated later in life and 8 percent for those never incarcerated. The study appears in the International Journal of Prisoner Health.

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