Post on 25-Dec-2015
Women, Re-entry and Everyday Life:Time to Work?
Venezia Michalsen, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor, Montclair State University
A research project sponsored by The Women's Prison Association
The importance of re-entry
Number of people released from State and Federal prisons has grown to 700,000 per year.
Successful re-entry benefits everyone:– Increased public safety– Lowered risk of re-incarceration
Successful re-entry is affected by many different elements:– Social support– Health and mental health support– Housing– Compliance with mandated requirements– Employment
Re-entry and work
Re-entry literature often discusses the importance of employment to successful re-entry
High levels of unemployment among re-entering populations.
Commonly researched barriers to employment are stigma, low education levels and limited job skills.
The importance of time in finding and keeping work
overlooked in the re-entry literature.
Time use and work in re-entry
Time use is salient for re-entering population seeking to prioritize work among a host of other re-entry goals.– Time use reflects people’s choices, priorities and skills.– Transition from structured life in prison to relatively
unstructured life outside of prison.
The role of time in the lives of re-entering women Women experience re-entry in unique ways
that may influence how they use the time available to work.– Most women are primary caregivers of children
before incarceration and cite family reunification as a primary goal.
– Women are particularly likely to be incarcerated for crimes involving drugs, and the vast majority used drugs before incarceration.
– Women are often released with extensive physical and mental health problems.
This study: Research question 1 Do women returning home from prison
or jail have enough time during the day to work?– How do scheduling demands produced by
involvement with multiple government and social service agencies affect the time available each day for work?
– Do the women think they have enough time during the day to work?
– Do the women have sufficient time management skills to manage their days to include work on a regular basis?
This study: Research question 2 How do the women’s own re-entry goals
and priorities affect how they use their time during the day and whether or not they work?– Is work valued?– How do the women’s pre-incarceration
employment histories shape their attitudes towards work?
– Did the attitudes and experiences of people they lived with during their childhood years help socialize the women to value work?
Sample and methodology Sample: 33 formerly incarcerated women
Instruments:– Screening
– Time Diaries for two days
– Follow-up interview• Review of time diaries
• Interview questions
• Event history calendar
• Genogram
Sample Time DiaryTIME WHAT WERE YOU DOING?
PLEASE CHECK ONE FOR EACH TIME PERIODWHO WERE YOU WITH?
CHECK ALL THAT APPLY
6:00-6:15AM
HOME ACTIVITY TRAVELING Where? :________________________________________________
How? : SUBWAY BUS WALK TAXI/CAR SERVICE CAR
ARRIVED AND/OR WAITING
OTHER ACTIVITY(EXPLAIN)_____________________________________________________
PARTNER CHILD FRIEND/RELATIVE CASE MANAGER OTHER, specify:
6:15- 6:30AM
HOME ACTIVITY TRAVELING Where? :________________________________________________
How? : SUBWAY BUS WALK TAXI/CAR SERVICE CAR
ARRIVED AND/OR WAITING
OTHER ACTIVITY(EXPLAIN)_____________________________________________________
PARTNER CHILD FRIEND/RELATIVE CASE MANAGER OTHER, specify:
6:30- 6:45AM
HOME ACTIVITY TRAVELING Where? :________________________________________________
How? : SUBWAY BUS WALK TAXI/CAR SERVICE CAR
ARRIVED AND/OR WAITING
OTHER ACTIVITY(EXPLAIN)_____________________________________________________
PARTNER CHILD FRIEND/RELATIVE CASE MANAGER OTHER, specify:
6:45- 7:00AM
HOME ACTIVITY TRAVELING Where? :________________________________________________
How? : SUBWAY BUS WALK TAXI/CAR SERVICE CAR
ARRIVED AND/OR WAITING
OTHER ACTIVITY(EXPLAIN)_____________________________________________________
PARTNER CHILD FRIEND/RELATIVE CASE MANAGER OTHER, specify:
Types of Appointments
The women’s days are taken up by group meetings, supportive services and health-related appointments rather than government and criminal justice appointments.
Although 21 respondents report in the screening that they are currently searching for employment, the time diaries of only five respondents show evidence of such searching.
Three subgroups Least-Scheduled (N=12)
Two or fewer appointments over the 2 days36% of the sample; 12% of appointments
Semi-Scheduled (N=9) Three to four appointments over the 2 days27% of the sample; 24% of appointments
Most-Scheduled (N=12) Five or more appointments over the 2 days36% of the sample; 63% of appointments
Time usage of the three subgroups
Least-Scheduled Semi-Scheduled Most-Scheduled
40 minutes per dayspent travelling to,waiting for andattendingappointments
3 hours per day 3 hours, 40 minutesper day
Almost 4 hour timegap betweenappointments
One hour One hour
Most appointmentsscheduled between9am and 5pm
Most appointmentsscheduled between9am and 5pm
Most appointmentsscheduled between9am and 5pm
Characteristics of the three subgroups
Least-Scheduled Semi-Scheduled Most-Scheduled
67% out more than oneyear
67% out more than oneyear
83% out more than oneyear
Group appointmentattendance 33%
Group appointmentattendance 67%
Group appointmentattendance 83%
58% seekingemployment
100% seekingemployment
42% seekingemployment
Time matters: Women’s schedules are constructed in ways that do not allow them to work For all three subgroups, the number of formal
commitments to government and social service agencies is not overly burdensome for the majority of respondents
Appointments do not take up very much time in the day
Most appointments are kept in the middle of the typical business day
Appointments are neither clustered to accommodate a job before or after the appointments, nor spaced far enough apart to allow for work between the appointments
Priority of Manifest Re-entry GoalsPriority # listing goal as 1st
priority# listing goal as
2nd priority# listing goal as one
of top 3 prioritiesEmployment 6 10 17
Housing 4 6 14
Children 7 2 12
Sobriety 5 1 8
Freedom 5 1 6
Education 1 3 4
Staying healthyMental and physical
1 1 4
Social supportStaying connected
1 1 3
OtherFocus on self, otherfamily, feelingresponsible andhelping others
3 1 6
The emergence of latent goals
I think all these appointments and time allow me to become more focused with things I needed to do, not to get distracted. I tell you, I can be very distracting… I didn’t have much time on my hands not to be focused. (page 83)
I find myself getting stretched like that, because I used to have a tendency of wanting to do everything in one day. And now I am becoming aware that the important things come first… all of it is important, but I have to prioritize, and just accept what is. So I don’t wear myself out. (page 91)
The tension: Manifest and latent goals Manifest Goals
– For example, housing and employment– Mentioned by nearly everyone, usually as top priorities
Latent Goals– Minimize Stress– Take care of themselves– Stay out of trouble
While the respondents said they were working towards both set of goals simultaneously, our respondents are more likely to structure their days to meet their latent goals than their stated ones.
Addressing both sets of goals truly simultaneously is the key to helping women get employed.
Ambiguity about the value of work
Support the idea of working for its functional appeal (e.g. money), though some also seek other returns
Childhood expectations that they would work
Work is associated with a positive self identity
Mixed messages from caretakers about work
Reluctant to take ill-paying jobs; illegal incomes are attractive
Many come from homes and neighborhoods where there are high levels of unemployment and/or dissatisfying employment
Sporadic work histories
What does this mean for employment?
Perceptions of impediments to employment– Perceptions of stigma are overwhelming– Most have unstable job histories and low qualifications– Unprepared for the emotional impact of the job search– Perception that appointments impede time for job searching– Health problems– Unprepared to meet regular schedule required by
employment
Recommendations & policy implications
Schedules are structured in a way that does not allow for work – Provide centralized, neighborhood-based services– Help women learn how to structure their day in anticipation
of employment– Teach women time management skills so that they can fit
job-seeking and working into their schedules– Offer services outside the traditional 9 to 5 work day.– Examine the aggregate effects of time usage on
communities– Introduce more activities, such as work, into women’s
schedules gradually after re-entry. This will help women to redefine what it means to be busy.
Recommendations & policy implications The women believe their manifest and latent
goals cannot be satisfied simultaneously– Teach women and service providers the ways in which
employment can satisfy both manifest and latent goals– Educate women about the range of job shifts and types
available– Determine how gender affects the priority service providers
give employment– Help women to minimize stress associated with with the
transition from highly structured time in prison to unstructured time in the community.
– Create a structured drop-in program that provides support activities such as employment preparation and resume building. Activities should not become commitments, which themselves would not preclude employment.
Recommendations & policy implications
Attractive employment is hard to find– Increase women’s ability to get better paying jobs– Increase the value of non-economic rewards for
employment– Explore the possibility of contracting with for-profit
organizations to reserve a fixed number of jobs for clients, similar to the way that agencies contract to reserve beds with emergency housing providers.
What does this mean for service providers?
Work around clients’ potential work schedules. Clients’ input about schedules and appointments. Discuss the possibility of alternate shifts. Counsel clients on the use of public transportation. Counsel clients, or arrange for counseling, about
time management skills. Balance assisting clients with providing training in
the skills they need to help themselves. Teach, or arrange for clients to learn stress-
management and relaxation strategies. Discuss with clients how a job can meet goals
other than obtaining money and satisfying parole requirements.