Evaluation of the Bridges to Life Parole Reentry Program

The National Policing Institute is evaluating the effectiveness of the Bridges to Life program, which provides an opportunity for inmates to engage in self-reflection that can lead them to become more self-accountable and responsible.

Project Overview

Bridges to Life (BTL) is a national program that provides an opportunity for inmates to engage in self-reflection that can lead them to become more self-accountable and responsible. A volunteer coordinator meets weekly with participants in small group circles over the course of 14 weeks. Discussions focus on accountability, repentance, forgiveness, and reconciliation. In between sessions, participants read required materials and answer study questions to be discussed in the next small group discussion.

However, BTL’s contact with participants ends when they are released from prison and the program has never tracked its participants in the community to see how they fare after release. The National Policing Institute is evaluating the effectiveness of the BTL program. The study will provide a rigorous assessment of the effectiveness of BTL and highlight obstacles parolees face upon release that could be used to strengthen reentry programs.

Methodology

Using parole records, provided by the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, we compared parole violations and new arrests between BTL graduates to a similar group of non-participants. We employed a quasi-experimental design using propensity scores to match 296 BTL participants with 296 similar parolees out of a pool of 7,622 who had not participated in the program. We compared reincarceration rates after one year and after 3-3 ½ years. The results of this analysis generally support the proposition that parolees who participated in the BTL program had lower rates of reincarceration than those who did not participate.

In the spring of 2021, we will finish conducting in-depth qualitative interviews with 20 BTL graduates to determine whether and how the program has helped them to overcome obstacles to readjusting to life in the community.

Project Resources

Forthcoming

Project Publications

Forthcoming

Strategic Priority Area(s)

Service Area(s)

Staff Contact(s)

Maria Valdovinos Olson

Maria Valdovinos Olson, M.A.

Senior Research Associate

Media Contact

Media inquiries should be directed to our Communications team at:

media@policinginstitute.org
202-833-1460

More Information

Project Status: Active

Location(s): National

Research Design: Quasi-experiment

Research Method(s): Interviews, Secondary data analysis

Strategic Priority Area(s)

Service Area(s)

Staff Contact(s)

Maria Valdovinos Olson

Maria Valdovinos Olson, M.A.

Senior Research Associate

Media Contact

 

Media inquiries should be directed to our Communications team at:

media@policinginstitute.org
202-833-1460