How is AI reshaping the way we live, create, connect, and evolve?
On June 13, Shared Futures: The AI Forum will bring together the cultural architects of our time to explore.
How is AI reshaping the way we live, create, connect, and evolve?
On June 13, Shared Futures: The AI Forum will bring together the cultural architects of our time to explore.
This article is a collaboration between Aspen Digital’s Beth Semel and Rework Reentry.
Beth is the Associate Director of Aspen Digital, with a focus on democratic initiatives and special projects.
A collaboration of Aspen Digital, the Aspen Criminal Justice Reform Initiative, and Slack, Rework Reentry seeks to identify and help eliminate systemic barriers to meaningful tech careers for people returning from incarceration. The effort engages returning persons, community leaders, and company executives through research-driven public education, convenings with key stakeholders, and documentary storytelling.
When released from incarceration, people may be “out,” but they’re not yet free. Laws exist at every level of government to prevent them from finding meaningful careers. The estimated unemployment rate for people returning from incarceration is 27%, higher than it has ever been for the general public.
In 2018, with support from Slack, The Last Mile, W.K. Kellogg Foundation, and FREEAMERICA, Next Chapter was founded with a bold mission: train and mentor people returning from incarceration to become coders at some of the world’s most respected tech companies. These are not just jobs. They are careers, and they can transform the lives of those employed, their families, and their communities.
There are substantial benefits, corporate and societal, to helping people returning from incarceration get a second chance. To be successful, however, companies need to take the time to understand the serious nature of this work and implement possible reforms to internal policies, workplace culture, and attitudes toward complex and weighty issues like race and the concept of redemption.
To help companies navigate the process for hiring and supporting people returning from incarceration, the Aspen Institute and Slack have just launched a new Playbook. It breaks down everything from legal and HR hurdles to the human elements of making hiring programs a long-term success. Divided into discrete, bite-sized content, the Playbook makes it easier for companies to answer the question, “Where to begin?”
Read on for the highlights.
Potential Challenge | SOLUTION |
---|---|
A company has no policy in place to consider the context if a person fails a background check. | Create a policy that escalates any flagged background check results to a leadership team that has an evaluation framework like “time-nature-time” and invites the person to provide context. |
Leadership and staff are worried about personal and information security. | Once companies establish educational opportunities and person-to-person exchanges between staff members and people returning from incarceration, worries often evaporate. Long-term employment and appropriate supports have been shown to reduce recidivism, and partnering with a third-party reentry support organization can help ensure that appropriate individualized assessments are made. |
Pre-existing contracts or interpretations of laws in your jurisdiction prohibit people returning from incarceration from working with customer data. | Restructure backend systems and development processes to allow for sufficient compartmentalization, and give employees the ability to work securely. |
A person returning from incarceration may need additional support to help with mentorship, housing, social services, trauma-informed care, and other reentry challenges. | Engage a third-party reentry organization, like Next Chapter, to help provide informed support and handle the care that companies may not be equipped to handle. |
The person returning from incarceration needs specialized training and on-the-job experience to finish their education. | Partner with a training organization or boot camp to provide specialized curriculum that meets the company’s needs. A company can also bring the person on for a time-limited apprenticeship phase where they learn on the job and work towards established milestones of performance. |
This sounds like a lot of work, and it is. But it’s worth it. At its most simple, the task is this: embrace individuals who are seeking a second chance, and help them to learn and be productive within the company. Support them, and take care to adapt to their specific needs. If this is done, companies can change lives and make their community, and the organization, better for it.
Download a shareable version of this summary here. Read the Playbook.
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