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57 J. Offender Rehab. 1 (2018)

handle is hein.journals/wjor57 and id is 1 raw text is: 


JOURNAL OF OFFENDER REHABILITATION
2018, VOL. 57, NO. 1, 1-21                                       Routledge
https://doi.org/10.1080/10509674.2017.1416439                    Taylor& Francis Group



Reversing the trend: The role of mentoring in
offender reentry
Melissa J. Stacer and Melinda R. Roberts
Criminal Justice Department, University of Southern Indiana, Evansville, Indiana, USA

   ABSTRACT                                                KEYWORDS
   Faith-based programs are  becoming  more  common   in           Faith-based; mentoring;
   corrections, with most research examining offenders. Little  offenders; reentry; religion
   attention has been paid to volunteers who work with offenders
   within these programs. In this project, 40 mentors who
   volunteered with a faith-based diversion and reentry program
   in southwestern Indiana were interviewed. Mentors revealed
   strong desires to help others, with religiosity driving their
   motivation to work with ex-offenders. Based on their mentoring
   experiences, mentors stated they were more sympathetic and
   their perspectives of ex-offenders and the conditions leading to
   crime had changed, including an increased awareness of
   problems related to reentry like housing, employment needs,
   and substance abuse.



With   the sheer  number of offenders reentering U.S. communities from
various  correctional  sanctions, more   attention  has been   given  to issues
surrounding   reentry. Numerous and diverse programs addressing reentry
have  emerged  over  the last several decades. President George  W.  Bush  was
the first president to mention reentry in his 2004 State of the Union  address,
culminating   in the passage  of the Second   Chance   Act signed  into law  in
March   2008 (Clear &  Frost, 2014). Faith-based programs   have even  received
federal  support   from   the   White   House Office of Faith-Based and
Neighborhood Partnerships (formerly the White House Office of Faith-Based
and   Community Initiatives). Faith-based programming and mentoring
programs   are  increasingly  acknowledged as important for rehabilitation
within the correctional system (Akers, Lane, &  Lanza-Kaduce,  2008; Connelly,
1995).  Given   the  high  cost  of corrections  and   correctional  programs,
volunteer-based   programs   through   religious organizations  are  viewed  as
viable alternatives (Chui &  Cheng,  2013;  Connelly,  1995). Chui  and  Cheng
(2013) found  in their study that a major motivation  for those who  volunteer
with  offenders is a desire to  share their faith. Coupled  with  the idea that
volunteers are given  little training on working with offenders  (Tewksbury  &
Collins,  2005)  and  concerns   about  volunteers   proselytizing to  inmates

CONTACT Melissa J. Stacer 0 mjstacer@usi.edu  Criminal Justice Department, University of Southern Indiana,
8600 University Blvd., Evansville, IN 47712, USA.
0 2018 Taylor & Francis

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