TY - JOUR AU - Raphael, Steven TI - Improving Employment Prospects for Former Prison Inmates: Challenges and Policy JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 15874 PY - 2010 Y2 - April 2010 DO - 10.3386/w15874 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w15874 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w15874.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Steven Raphael Goldman School of Public Policy University of California at Berkeley 2607 Hearst Avenue Berkeley, CA 94720 Tel: 510/643-0536 Fax: 510/643-9657 E-Mail: stevenraphael@berkeley.edu M1 - published as Steven Raphael. "Improving Employment Prospects for Former Prison Inmates: Challenges and Policy," in Philip Cook, Jens Ludwig, Justin McCrary, editors, "Controlling Crime: Strategies and Tradeoffs" University of Chicago Press (2011) M3 - presented at "Economical Crime Control Conference", January 15-16, 2010 AB - This paper analyzes the employment prospects of former prison inmates and reviews recent evaluations of reentry programs that either aim to improve employment among the formerly incarcerated or aim to reduce recidivism through treatment interventions centered on employment. I present an empirical portrait of the U.S. prison population and prison releases using nationally representative survey data. I characterize the personal traits of state and federal prison inmates, including their level of educational attainment and age as well as the health and mental health issues that occur with high frequency among this population. I then turn to the demand side of this particular segment of the U.S. labor market. Using a 2003 survey of California establishments, I characterize employers' preferences with regards to hiring convicted felons into non-managerial, non-professional jobs, the degree to which employers check criminal history records, and the incidence of legal prohibitions against hiring convicted felons. I conduct multivariate analyses of the impact of checking criminal backgrounds on the likelihood of hiring workers of difference race/gender combinations, using legal prohibition against hiring felons as an instrument for checking. Finally, I review the research evidence evaluating programmatic efforts to improve employment prospects and reduce recidivism among former prison inmates. ER -