Freedom to Achieve

Pathways and Practices for Economic Advancement After Incarceration

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Table of Contents

   

Why People With Records are Struggling to Get Hired

Hiring people who have been incarcerated and have a record has never been a priority in the United States. Finding any job is difficult for people who were once incarcerated, but finding a sustainable, family-supporting job is nearly impossible.

Reentry is a challenging personal experience, complicated by structural barriers and systemic inequities.

On average, a state has 56 occupational and 43 business licensing laws that prohibit hiring people with records.

Racial inequities in our workforce and criminal justice systems only heighten these barriers for formerly incarcerated Black and Latinx workers and often trap them into a cycle where the best-case scenario is underemployment, and the worst-case scenario is returning to prison.

Unemployment Rates for the General Population and the Formerly Incarcerated, by Race and Gender, 2018

43.6% of formerly incarcerated black women are unemployed. 6.4% of black women in the general population are unemployed. 35.2% of formerly incarcerated black men are unemployed. 7.7% of black men in the general population are unemployed. 23.2% of formerly incarcerated white women are unemployed. 4.3% of white women in the general population are unemployed. 18.4% of formerly incarcerated white men are unemployed. 4.3% of white men in the general population are unemployed.

The Likelihood of a Callback or Job Offer, by Race and Interaction Type

Figure 2_v2

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, momentum was building for fair chance hiring—the practice of assessing a jobseeker’s criminal record only after determining the person is qualified for the job, and a growing number of private employers were willing to hire people with criminal records. Now, with roughly 10 million people looking for work, employers can choose from a large pool of qualified candidates, making it less compelling to hire someone who has been previously incarcerated.

Our Mission

Our Mission

Equitable Economic Advancement for People With Records

 

 

Crowd in front of the Lincoln Memorial

Economic Advancement

Ensure the 70 million Americans with a criminal record, who are disproportionately Black, Latinx, and people from low-income backgrounds, are positioned for employment with opportunities for advancement and earning a living wage.

Economic Advancement

Equity

Guide reforms to remove barriers shaped by the nation’s history of systemic racial inequities, which prevent employers from adopting fair chance hiring practices.

Two people shaking hands

Faces of Incarceration

U.S. Prison Population Statistics

The “face” of the U.S. prison population has been represented in popular culture as a Black male; however, this is a diverse population in terms of race and ethnicity, gender, age, educational attainment, and work experience.

Click below to view a breakdown of demographics.

Building Blocks of Success for Lifetime Careers 

People with records have specific needs that employers must meet in order to place them on a path to economic advancement. To maximize equity and economic mobility success for people with records, we must take a strategic, tiered approach that will enable them to move from transitional jobs to springboard and lifetime jobs.

Transitional Jobs

The strongest transitional jobs programs for people reentering the community combine in-demand skills training with case management to help individuals quickly stabilize and connect to full-time work. These jobs typically are low paying and offer few options for growth and higher wages.

TransitionalJobs

Springboard Jobs

The best springboard jobs lead to career advancement for people with criminal records through promotion to jobs that offer greater responsibility and pay within an industry. Apprenticeships and social enterprise models are effective models that lead from springboard to lifetime jobs.

SpringboardJobs

Lifetime Jobs

Lifetime jobs are careers that offer living wages and long-term stability but may not lead to higher-level positions. Investing in prison education and training programs like Apprenticeship Readiness Programs set returning citizens up for economic mobility.

LifetimeJobs

Promising Practices

People with records have specific needs that employers must meet in order to place them on a path to economic advancement. To maximize equity and economic mobility success for people with records, we must take a strategic approach to change the local workforce ecosystem that will enable individuals to move from transitional jobs to springboard and lifetime jobs.

 

Equity Matters

Moving from incarceration to careers is a daunting challenge for individuals and mobility systems. We need to create pathways for individuals who have been incarcerated and redesign the systems that should be (but are not yet) able to set the trajectory for economic advancement for people reentering the community. What will it take to develop a connected, scalable workforce development ecosystem that disrupts current inequities? 

 

  1. Ensure that people who have experienced incarceration are core stakeholders in all aspects of workforce redesign efforts.
  2. Establish cross-sector collaboration to ensure policies, resources, and best practices for talent development align across the systems responsible for providing education and training for people with records.
  3. Integrate evidence-based models into a transparent, navigable, and equitable workforce development ecosystem that positions people who have been incarcerated for economic advancement.
  4. Ensure inclusive and equitable practices promote access, retention, and advancement in education pathways and employment.
  5. Increase investments in pathways and practices that promote economic advancement for returning citizens and people with records.

 

Work With Us

Become a Fair Chance Employer and Expand Economic Mobility for People with Records

JFF’s Center for Justice and Economic Advancement is excited to partner with employers, education and training providers, and those who have personal experience navigating the justice system to advance efforts to provide critical services to people with records and expand access to education and employment opportunities.

In addition to preparing people with records for sustainable employment, we must join forces to advance policy agendas that support systemic changes that set up people who are incarcerated and who have records for economic success. Together, we can make a difference by mobilizing employers, providing technical assistance and education, conducting research to identify transformative solutions, and raising awareness by changing the social narrative of this complex issue.