Housing ex‐prisoners: the role of the third sector
Abstract
Purpose
The aim of the paper is to examine the contribution made by housing‐related third sector organisations (TSOs) in assisting ex‐prisoners to find housing, and the barriers they face in doing so.
Design/methodology/approach
An offender survey was used to measure awareness of and engagement with TSOs in eight prisons, alongside qualitative interviews with prisoners, criminal justice staff and TSO representatives.
Findings
Despite the involvement of TSOs, securing accommodation for ex‐prisoners remains complex and difficult, largely due to high service demand, housing shortages, budget cuts, and needs assessment and allocations systems which reduce the responsiveness of housing providers to the reducing re‐offending agenda.
Research limitations/implications
The research benefited from a mixed‐method approach which captured the perceptions of service users and professionals. The response rate for the offender survey was low (12 per cent), and the survey findings should be treated with caution.
Practical implications
Local authorities and other housing providers need to be more willing to accept ex‐prisoners as potential service users, and better links need to be made between local homelessness strategies, choice based lettings systems and prisoner resettlement programmes. Providing support services to ex‐offenders may encourage such acceptance and help to maintain the motivation to desist from crime.
Originality/value
Previous research has paid little specific attention to the role of TSOs in (ex)offender housing. This paper addresses this omission by drawing on original empirical research to examine the value of their work in securing accommodation for ex‐prisoners and helping to reduce re‐offending.
Keywords
Citation
Mills, A., Gojkovic, D., Meek, R. and Mullins, D. (2013), "Housing ex‐prisoners: the role of the third sector", Safer Communities, Vol. 12 No. 1, pp. 38-49. https://doi.org/10.1108/17578041311293134
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2013, Emerald Group Publishing Limited