HOME
|
What's New!
|
Contact Us
|
Site Map
| Sign In
Training
Find Training
Self-Study Training
Video / Satellite
Resources for Trainers
About Our Training
Services
Consulting
Research Assistance
Library
Browse the Online Library
Web Site Directory
Popular Topics
Ask A Research Expert
About the Library
Community
Corrections News/Blogs
Discussion Forums
Shared Files
FREE! Join Now!
Projects
Learn about what we are working on and locate opportunities for assistance, research, and training related to key topics in corrections.
About Us
Overview
Divisions
History
Mission & Goals
Organizational Structure
Advisory Board
Employment Opportunities
Cooperative Agreements
Publications
Training Opportunity
» "
New Gender Responsive Classification Instruments for Women Offenders: What do they look like and ...
"
Projects
The Transition from Prison to Community Model
Current Projects
Direct Supervision Jails
Faith-Based and Community Initiatives
Leadership & Management
Mental Illness
Norval Morris Project
Offender Classification
Offender Reentry/Transition
Offender Employment
Parole
PREA / Offender Sexual Abuse
Pretrial
Reducing Offender Risk
Regional Training
Security
Training Design & Development
Women Offenders
::
HOME
>
What We Are Doing
>
Offender Reentry/Transition
>
Who's Using TPC
TPC State Profiles
The TPC model encourages strategic system changes to reduce recidivism and future victimization, to enhance public safety, and to improve the lives of communities, victims, and offenders.
Model Components
Mobilize interdisciplinary, collaborative leadership teams
convened by corrections agencies to guide reentry efforts at state and local levels.
Engage in a rational planning process
to carefully define goals, develop a clear understanding of reentering offender populations and their rates of recidivism, and review existing policies, procedures, and resources for reentry.
Integrate stages of offenders' processing
through the justice/corrections system (beginning at commitment to prison or earlier and continuing through assessment, prison programming, preparation for release, release, and supervision in the community), resulting in a carefully planned process with close communication and collaboration among prison officials, releasing authorities, and post-prison supervision staff.
Involve non-correctional stakeholders
(public, private, and community agencies) who can provide services and support as reentry efforts are planned and implemented.
Assure that transitioning offenders are provided basic survival resources
such as identification documents, housing, appropriate medications, linkages to community services and informal networks of support before, during, and after they are released from prison.
Implement valid offender assessments
at various stages of the offender's movement through the system.
Target effective interventions
,based on good research,to address the offenders' risks and criminogenic needs identified by assessments.
Expand the traditional roles of correctional staff
beyond custody, security, accountability, and monitoring to include an integrated approach to offender management that engages offenders in the process of change.
Develop the capacity to measure change
toward specific outcomes and track information that can be used for planning future improvements.
::
USA.gov
>
U.S. Dept. of Justice
>
Bureau of Prisons
>
National Institute of Corrections
>
.::
Privacy & Disclaimers
::
Accessibility
::.