Skip to main content
Department of Justice Logo
Home
NEWSLETTER SIGN UP

Main navigation

  • Topics
    • Community Supervision: Probation and Parole
    • Correctional Education
    • Correctional Supervision: Prisons and Jails
    • Criminal Records
    • Employment
    • Evaluation and Sustainability
    • Family Engagement
    • Health Policy
    • Housing
    • Law Enforcement
    • Mental Health
    • Mentoring and Community Partnerships
    • Program Quality and Performance Measurement
    • Screening, Assessment, and Planning
    • Sex Offender Treatment
    • Substance Use Treatment
    • Tribal Affairs
    • Victim Engagement
    • Voting Rights
    • Youth/Young Adults
  • Resources
    • Briefs
    • Funding Opportunities
    • Reports
    • Research
    • Toolkits
    • Medicaid and Corrections
    • Building Second Chances: Tools for Local Reentry Coalitions
    • Clean Slate Clearinghouse
    • National Inventory of Collateral Consequences of Conviction
  • Multimedia
    • Reentry Now
    • Infographics
    • Podcasts
    • Videos
  • Events & Webinars
    • Conferences
    • Webinars
  • Second Chance Act
    • SCA Program Tracks
    • SCA Funding Opportunities
    • SCA Success Stories
    • SCA Grantee Program Map
    • SCA Interview
    • SCA Technical Assistance
    • Second Chance Month 2025
  • News
    • NRRC News
    • Press Clips
  • About
    • About the NRRC
    • Contact the NRRC
  1. Home
  2. Search

Age

  • (-) SELECT ALL (27)
  • Adults (21)
  • Both Adults and Youth/Young Adults (4)
  • Youth/Young Adults (2)

Audiences

  • (-) SELECT ALL (81)
  • Community Leaders (15)
  • Family of Impacted Person (8)
  • Impacted Persons (14)
  • Law Enforcement (1)
  • Policymakers (18)
  • Practitioners (22)
  • Researchers (3)

Resource Type

  • SELECT ALL (53)
  • Report (15)
  • Toolkit (5)
  • Journal Article (4)
  • Funding Opportunity (1)
  • Research (1)
  • (-) Brief (27)

Topics

  • SELECT ALL (218)
  • Background Checks (2)
  • Collateral Consequences (4)
  • Community Supervision: Probation and Parole (15)
  • Correctional Education (6)
  • Correctional Supervision: Prisons and Jails (18)
  • (-) Criminal and Juvenile Records (27)
  • Employment (24)
  • Evaluation and Sustainability (10)
  • Family Engagement (9)
  • Health Policy (5)
  • Housing (8)
  • Law Enforcement (1)
  • Mental Health (5)
  • Mentoring and Community Partnerships (15)
  • Program Quality and Performance Measurement (7)
  • Records Clearance, Expungement, and Sealing (6)
  • Reentry Week (2)
  • SCA Conference News (1)
  • Screening, Assessment, and Planning (8)
  • Second Chance Act (25)
  • Second Chance Month (9)
  • Substance Use Treatment (8)
  • Youth/Young Adults (3)

27 resultsUse filters at left to refine your results.
September 15, 2014
Clean Slate

What Juvenile Defenders Should Know about the DSM-5

This resource brief, from the National Juvenile Defender Center (NJDC), is intended to support juvenile defense advocacy by providing an overview of s...
January 15, 2015

States Ban the Box: Removing Barriers to Work for People with Criminal Records

By Liam JulianAround 65 million Americans of working age have criminal records. Finding a job isn’t easy for anyone, but it’s especially difficult for...
March 13, 2018

Seeking New Perspective, Interview Series Gives Firsthand Look at Criminal Record Clearance Experiences

By Carla Sinclair, CSG Justice Center staff With awareness of the need for criminal justice reform on the rise across the country, hearing stories ...
June 30, 2015

South Carolina Business, Community, and Corrections Leaders Gather in Greenville to Discuss Employing People with Criminal Records

Nearly one in three adults in South Carolina—1.1 million people—have a criminal record. Many of them also have trouble finding a job, not necessarily ...
December 17, 2014

Q & A with Margaret Love of the Collateral Consequences Resource Center

By Mai P. Tran, Program Associate Margaret Love, executive director and editor of the Collateral Consequences Reentry Resource Center.Individuals retu...
April 21, 2014

Nebraska Joins Growing Number of States to Pass "Ban the Box"

Nebraska recently became the 11th state to pass “Ban the Box,” a law that removes questions about criminal records on state job applications. Enacted ...
February 18, 2015

Memphis Business Leaders Discuss Overcoming Challenges with Employing Individuals with Criminal Records

MEMPHIS, TN—A group of influential local business leaders joined state and local policymakers in Memphis last month to discuss opportunities and chall...
December 2, 2015

Midwestern States Share Innovative Strategies for Hiring People with Criminal Records

By the CSG Justice Center StaffIn 2012, three Michigan-based employers—Butterball Farms, Cascade Engineering, and Grand Rapids Community College—set o...
February 27, 2018

White House Hosts Governors and Business Executives to Discuss Benefits of Hiring People Who Have Criminal Records

#carouselExampleIndicators .carousel-indicators li { background-color: #004b8d; } Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin (left) and Colorado Gov. John Hic...
March 14, 2022
Clean Slate

The Limits of Ban-the-Box Legislation

This Institute for Research on Labor and Employment brief serves to provide policy recommendations on Ban-the-Box (BtB), employment, and reentry. T...

Pagination

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • Next › Next page
  • Last » Last page
NEWSLETTER SIGN UP

Department of Justice Logo BJA Logo

OJJDP Logo

CSG Justice Center

©NRRC 2026 — Privacy policy

The National Reentry Resource Center is operated by the Council of State Governments Justice Center and supported by Grant No. 15PBJA-23-GK-05503-MUMU awarded by the Bureau of Justice Assistance. The Bureau of Justice Assistance is a component of the Office of Justice Programs, which also includes the Bureau of Justice Statistics, the National Institute of Justice, the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, the Office for Victims of Crime, and Office of Sex Offender Sentencing, Monitoring, Apprehending, Registering, and Tracking. Points of view or opinions in this document are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the official position or policies of the U.S. Department of Justice.