This category includes companies that operate “community” supervision that is enforced on people as part of the U.S. criminal punishment system, either after incarceration (“reentry”) or as an “alternative to incarceration” program. These services and systems include probation and parole supervision, day reporting centers, jail and community-based “reentry” centers, post-incarceration vocational training programs, drug and alcohol treatment programs, and other “diversion” programs.
While marketed as programs that reduce recidivism and assist formerly incarcerated individuals with transitioning back into their communities, these for-profit “community corrections” services have long been criticized for expanding the reach of the criminal punishment system and prolonging periods of state monitoring.
This category does not include two industries typically considered a part of “community corrections” that we have documented separately: bail bonds and e-carceration (electronic monitoring).
For our 2018 report on the “community corrections” industry, see here.