Program Goals
Employment and social support are important factors in an individual’s successful reintegration into the community after release from prison, including their desistance from crime (Gillis and Nafekh 2005; Cherney and Fitzgerald 2016). However, many individuals reentering society after incarceration have difficulty finding and keeping a job owing to many factors, such as lack of training, work experience, and reliable transportation. Additionally, some employers have apprehensions about hiring people who have previously been incarcerated (Shoham and Timor 2014). In Israel, the Prisoner Rehabilitation Authority’s Vocational Support and Supervision Program was developed to offer supervision, rehabilitation, and care within the community for individuals released from prison, with emphases on employment, job placement, and support during the time they are on parole. The goal is to improve an individual’s integration into employment and reduce their recidivism.
Program Components/Target Population
Under the Vocational Support and Supervision Program, individuals are released early from prison and are supervised in the community for the remaining one third of their original sentence. Individuals in prison may be eligible if they express interest, motivation, and commitment to the program conditions set by the counselors assigned to them. Admission to the program is conditional on 1) the individual’s physical and mental ability to work, 2) their cooperation with therapeutic agencies in prison, and 3) their being drug free for a period of at least 6 months. Participation is voluntarily, and the reduced prison sentence is dependent on full participation. A tailored therapeutic program for the individual is presented to the parole board for approval. If approved, the individual is conditionally released from prison and subject to the supervision of Israel’s Prisoner Rehabilitation Authority, which is required to provide quarterly progress reports to the parole board (Peled–Laskov, Timor, and Gideon 2021).
Every individual under supervision of the program is required to participate in therapy twice a week, with one 50-minute individual therapy session and one 50-minute group session. In the individual therapy session, difficulties faced by the person reentering the community are raised; these may include problems in the workplace, difficulty in accepting authority, coping with the temptation to return to criminality, traumas from the incarceration, or difficulties and pressures in the individual’s family. In group therapy, individuals are placed in a specific group based on the type of crime they have committed (fraud, violence, sex, drugs, etc.). Group therapy sessions allow individuals to discuss problems with others in their same situation, which provides support and helps them cope with their struggles. Group therapy sessions also work to identify individual’s misconceptions and mistaken beliefs, such as those related to work, and try to change them (Efodi 2014).
Program participants are allowed to find employment for themselves upon leaving prison, but they must obtain approval for the jobs from the Prisoner Rehabilitation Authority and the police. An individual also may work with the Prisoner Rehabilitation Authority to find suitable employment. Regarding supervision, the Prisoner Rehabilitation Authority monitors participants’ regular work attendance, checks for problems at work, and offers assistance by conducting visits to the program participant’s workplace. The frequency of these visits varies from one to three times a month and is determined by the individual’s risk level.
Key Personnel
Israel’s Prisoner Rehabilitation Authority is the state authority tasked with preparing programs for the supervision and guidance of individuals on parole (Parole Law 2001). The various therapeutic personnel involved in the Vocational Support and Supervision Program are expected to work together and update one another on the progress of the participants’ therapies. The Prisoner Rehabilitation Authority’s regional inspector oversees the program and all participants, including what happens at work, at home, and in the individual and group therapy (Peled–Laskov, Shoham, and Cojocaru 2019).
Program Theory
The rationale of employment-focused supervision programs to reduce recidivism for individuals on parole is supported by a few theories. One is related to rational choice theory, with the understanding that committing a crime involves rational choices (Clarke and Felson 1993) and rehabilitation offers an economic alternative by allowing the individual to earn an income from legitimate work. Programs that help individuals develop work skills provide them with an opportunity to move away from a life of crime. Additionally, desistance theory describes an individual’s gradual process away from crime (e.g. (Bersani and Doherty 2018; Broidy and Cauffman 2017; LeBel et al. 2008); specifically, secondary desistance involves a change in criminal behavior based on a change in the personal identity of the individual. One of the key components of secondary desistance is the integration of the individual back into employment and “normal” life. Therefore, offering support and employment assistance to individuals who have been released from prison is an important component in their rehabilitation and reduction in future criminal behavior (Peled–Laskov, Shoham, and Cojocaru 2019).