With its July 2015 announcement of the Second Chance Pell Pilot Program, the U.S. Department of Education ushered in what could be a new era of expanded opportunities for postsecondary education in our nation's prisons. The Second Chance Pell Pilot makes students incarcerated in state and federal prisons eligible for need-based financial aid in a limited number of authorized sites—meaning postsecondary education is likely to become a reality for an increased number of the more than 1.5 million people in prisons nationwide.Research shows that—among other benefits to individuals, families, communities, and prisons—incarcerated people who participate in prison education programs are 43 percent less likely to recidivate than those who do not. T...
The United States has faced a critical problem of mass incarceration for decades. One of the dominan...
The United States has faced a critical problem of mass incarceration for decades. One of the dominan...
Administration of post-secondary correctional education (PSCE) programs within state was vastly chan...
Support for postsecondary correctional education expands and contracts with the dominant political i...
Examines enrollment, instruction, eligibility, and funding for postsecondary correctional education ...
In 2013, the Vera Institute of Justice launched the Unlocking Potential: Pathways from Prison to Pos...
Thesis advisor: Andrés Castro SamayoaThe involvement of colleges and universities in the provision o...
This project discusses the impact prison education has on the rate of recidivism. The goal of the c...
In the United States of America there are more people incarcerated than in any other developed count...
Outlines trends in education programming in state prisons, including types of courses, participation...
Corrections literature maintains the profound utility of postsecondary education programs in reducin...
Mass incarceration and repeated offenses are major issues in New York State. The Institute for Highe...
Several factors impact whether inmates are successful upon release. Lack of education and job skills...
The United States is currently housing 2,220,300 inmates. At least 90% of these inmates will eventua...
This study examines the transition of a post-secondary correctional education (PSCE) system formerly...
The United States has faced a critical problem of mass incarceration for decades. One of the dominan...
The United States has faced a critical problem of mass incarceration for decades. One of the dominan...
Administration of post-secondary correctional education (PSCE) programs within state was vastly chan...
Support for postsecondary correctional education expands and contracts with the dominant political i...
Examines enrollment, instruction, eligibility, and funding for postsecondary correctional education ...
In 2013, the Vera Institute of Justice launched the Unlocking Potential: Pathways from Prison to Pos...
Thesis advisor: Andrés Castro SamayoaThe involvement of colleges and universities in the provision o...
This project discusses the impact prison education has on the rate of recidivism. The goal of the c...
In the United States of America there are more people incarcerated than in any other developed count...
Outlines trends in education programming in state prisons, including types of courses, participation...
Corrections literature maintains the profound utility of postsecondary education programs in reducin...
Mass incarceration and repeated offenses are major issues in New York State. The Institute for Highe...
Several factors impact whether inmates are successful upon release. Lack of education and job skills...
The United States is currently housing 2,220,300 inmates. At least 90% of these inmates will eventua...
This study examines the transition of a post-secondary correctional education (PSCE) system formerly...
The United States has faced a critical problem of mass incarceration for decades. One of the dominan...
The United States has faced a critical problem of mass incarceration for decades. One of the dominan...
Administration of post-secondary correctional education (PSCE) programs within state was vastly chan...