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 <subject>Drug treatment</subject>
 <subject>Halfway houses</subject>
 <subject>Offender rehabilitation</subject>
 <subject>Parolees</subject>
 <subject>Prisoners</subject>
 <subject>Recidivism</subject>
 <subject>Statistical data</subject>
 <subject>DOJ/DOL/HHS Offender Reentry Initiative</subject>
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<titleInfo>
 <title>Prisoner Releases: Trends and Information on Reintegration Programs</title>
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<abstract>The number of federal and state inmates released to communities
increased more than threefold from 1980 to 1998. Recividism rates
have been about 40 percent historically, since about 1980. Within
the group of recividists, the number of offenders reincarcerated 
for violating parole or other release conditions increased more  
than sevenfold from 1980 to 1998. Further, such reincarcerations 
represent an increasing proportion of all prison admissions. The 
Bureau of Justice Statistics&apos; (BJS) 1997 survey found that most  
federal offenders (62 percent) were imprisoned for drug offense  
convictions, and almost half (47 percent) of all state offenders 
were incarcerated for violent offense convictions. Also, the	 
majority of inmates in both correctional systems--federal inmates
(73 percent) and state inmates (83 percent)--had some history of 
illegal drug use. BJS&apos; survey also showed that 27 percent of both
federal and state exit cohort inmates participated in vocational 
training programs, and 11 percent of federal and 2 percent of	 
state exit cohort inmates worked in prison industry jobs. In	 
addition, 33 percent of the federal inmates and 36 percent of the
state inmates participated in residential in-patient treatment	 
programs for alcohol and drug abuse. Generally, in the federal	 
correctional system, an inmate&apos;s preparation for reintegration is
to encompass all three phases of the system--the prerelease,	 
halfway house, and community supervision. Under the Offender	 
Reentry Initiative, federal discretionary grants would be	 
provided to help states and communities work together to improve 
offender supervision and accountability--and essential support	 
services--in order to minimize public safety issues posed by	 
high-risk or special-needs offenders released from state prisons,
juvenile correctional facilities, and local facilities housing	 
state prisoners. A solicitation for grants is expected by the end
of May 2001, and awards are expected to be made by the end of	 
September 2001.</abstract>
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<subject>
 <topic>Drug treatment</topic>
 <topic>Halfway houses</topic>
 <topic>Offender rehabilitation</topic>
 <topic>Parolees</topic>
 <topic>Prisoners</topic>
 <topic>Recidivism</topic>
 <topic>Statistical data</topic>
 <topic>DOJ/DOL/HHS Offender Reentry Initiative</topic>
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  <partNumber>Title 18 Section 3621</partNumber>
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  <title>United States Public Law 134 (104th Congress)</title>
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 <identifier type="public law citation">Public Law 104-134</identifier>
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