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Imprisonment Length and Post-Prison Employment Prospects

NCJ Number
248267
Journal
Criminology Volume: 52 Issue: 3 Dated: August 2014 Pages: 399-427
Author(s)
Anke Ramakers; Robert Apel; Paul Nieuwbeerta; Anja Dirkzwager; Johan Van Wilsem
Date Published
August 2014
Length
29 pages
Annotation
This study considers the relationship between imprisonment length and employment outcomes.
Abstract
All subjects thus experience prison confinement of varying lengths, although the durations are relatively short (mean = 3.8 months; median = 3.1 months). This contrasts with prior research that was limited to the study of American prison sentences spanning an average of 2 years. These data thus fill a gap in the empirical base concerning short-term confinement, which is the norm in the United States (e.g., jail incarceration) and other Western countries. Using a comprehensive array of pre-prison covariates, a propensity score methodology is used to examine the dose-response relationship between imprisonment length and a variety of employment outcomes. The results indicate that, among prison lengths less than 6 months in duration, longer confinement is largely uncorrelated with employment. In contrast, among spells in excess of 6 months, longer imprisonment length seems to worsen employment prospects. (Published Abstract)