CENTERING PEOPLE AND INDIVIDUALIZING SERVICES

Addressing Service Gaps for Emerging Adults on Probation

Emerging adults – individuals aged 17 to 24 – experience arrest and conviction at higher rates than their older peers. While extensive research suggests several explanatory reasons for this, emerging neuroscience suggests the greatest explanatory reason may be from brain development. Neuroscience suggests these individuals are cognitively distinct because their brain development, especially that which regulates decision making, emotional control, executive functioning, and impulse control, is still developing.

Currently, many corrections agencies, like prisons and jails, are responsible for the care of individuals aged 17 to 24 and providing support for this group to eventually move back home to their communities. This emerging science suggests the most responsive care corrections agencies can provide to this group is developmentally appropriate programming which cognitively meets them where they are.

JSP, in partnership with Dr. Faye Taxman from George Manson University, is assisting with implementation of the DREAM program in county jail in Rockdale, Georgia. The program addresses the cognitive and development needs faced by emerging adults transitioning from the Rockdale County jail to the community. JSP will evaluate the effectiveness of the program across key behavioral (e.g., housing, employment) and perceptual (e.g., self-control, emotional regulation, decision-making) outcomes. Implementing and evaluating this model will advance evidence toward effective supervision strategies for emerging adults and aims to develop best practices that center individuals who remain entangled in the criminal legal system.

Related Resources

Pillars Guiding Our Work

Keeping People Out of the System

Keeping People Out of the System

Getting People Who are in the System Out Quickly

Getting People Who are in the System Out Quickly

Centering People Who Remain in the System and Individualizing Services

Centering People Who Remain in the System and Individualizing Services

Caring For People Who Care For People Impacted by the System

Caring For People Who Care For People Impacted by the System

We organize our work into four key pillars. The goal of these pillars is to eliminate the reach of the carceral state on people and communities, and to take care of people and staff impacted by involvement. At JSP, we acknowledge that structural racism exists both in society and within the criminal legal system. We also acknowledge an individual’s race, skin tone, gender, disability, sexuality, age, and income, and the intersection of these and other factors exacerbate the structural inequities they experience navigating the criminal legal system.

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