Tens of millions of Americans have criminal records, including about 20 million with felony convictions. Conviction records automatically trigger countless collateral legal consequences, such as occupational restrictions that bar employers from hiring qualified candidates. Moreover, research overwhelmingly shows that bearing a criminal record raises significant barriers to employment, housing, and various other opportunities. These persistent obstacles can overwhelm an individual’s efforts at reintegration and can aggravate poverty, inequality, and racial disparities in our society. And because factors like unemployment and housing instability contribute to crime risk, these effects in turn make society less safe
Public concern has mounted about the essentially permanent stigma created by a criminal record. This...
Mass incarceration has a far-reaching impact when an estimated 70 million, 1 in 3, adults have a cri...
To date, researchers have been very attentive to how the stigma of criminality informs employers’ hi...
Poor individuals of color disproportionately carry the weight of a criminal record. They confront an...
An estimated one in three American adults has a criminal record. While some records are for serious ...
This paper adds to the empirical evidence that criminal records are a barrier to employment. Using d...
The harms of mass incarceration do not end when an individual is released from prison. Instead, crim...
Prosecutors and courts often charge a premium for the ability to avoid or erase a criminal convictio...
With over 2 million individuals currently incarcerated, and over half a million prisoners released e...
States have begun to pass legislation to provide automatic relief for eligible criminal records, pot...
Criminal justice reform discussions routinely permeate political and societal media forums. Many pro...
Too few people eligible for clearing their criminal record take up the program. Although the policy ...
Through the process of record clearance, individuals can have certain minor convictions removed from...
Over the past forty years the prison population in the United States has skyrocketed 600% and the nu...
We know from experience that if former prisoners can’t find work, or a home, or help, they are much ...
Public concern has mounted about the essentially permanent stigma created by a criminal record. This...
Mass incarceration has a far-reaching impact when an estimated 70 million, 1 in 3, adults have a cri...
To date, researchers have been very attentive to how the stigma of criminality informs employers’ hi...
Poor individuals of color disproportionately carry the weight of a criminal record. They confront an...
An estimated one in three American adults has a criminal record. While some records are for serious ...
This paper adds to the empirical evidence that criminal records are a barrier to employment. Using d...
The harms of mass incarceration do not end when an individual is released from prison. Instead, crim...
Prosecutors and courts often charge a premium for the ability to avoid or erase a criminal convictio...
With over 2 million individuals currently incarcerated, and over half a million prisoners released e...
States have begun to pass legislation to provide automatic relief for eligible criminal records, pot...
Criminal justice reform discussions routinely permeate political and societal media forums. Many pro...
Too few people eligible for clearing their criminal record take up the program. Although the policy ...
Through the process of record clearance, individuals can have certain minor convictions removed from...
Over the past forty years the prison population in the United States has skyrocketed 600% and the nu...
We know from experience that if former prisoners can’t find work, or a home, or help, they are much ...
Public concern has mounted about the essentially permanent stigma created by a criminal record. This...
Mass incarceration has a far-reaching impact when an estimated 70 million, 1 in 3, adults have a cri...
To date, researchers have been very attentive to how the stigma of criminality informs employers’ hi...