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Institute Intelligence
Insights, case studies, news, and updates from ISLG’s good governance research and action.
Lessons Learned & Recommendations from the College-in-Prison Reentry Initiative
ISLG’s evaluation of the CIP Initiative has sought to better understand implementation of CIP by documenting the CIP model over time, including: how programs are established and how they operate in correctional facilities, the challenges programs experience and how they navigate those challenges, and the successes programs experience in achieving the aims of the Initiative.
Investing in Workforce Development Can Lead to Meaningful Careers for Formerly Incarcerated People
The current employment upheaval, or the Great Resignation, reminds us that the opportunity to pursue meaningful and fulfilling work—something more than just a job—should extend to everyone. However, people who are formerly incarcerated are a group who often can only access employment with low pay, stress, and little opportunity for advancement. They are often locked out of careers because of a lack of educational credentials, training, or other systemic barriers.
Foundations and Principles for Funding Youth Development: Lessons Learned from the Youth Opportunity Hubs Initiative
The Youth Opportunity Hubs have brought important benefits to young people and their communities, including a greater sense of safety, well-being, and opportunity. For funders and policymakers who are looking to support young people and increase cross-sector collaboration, the evaluation of the Youth Opportunity Hubs initiative points to key lessons.
Community-Based Partnerships That Focus on Positive Youth Development and Meet Young People’s Needs: Youth Opportunity Hubs
Across New York City, many young people are in need of youth-centered spaces that meet their diverse needs and draw on and lift up their strengths. Unfortunately, funding constraints of the social service system often lead to siloes between organizations, making it difficult for youth to access all of the services available to them. The Youth Opportunity Hubs, opened with CJII funding in 2017, were created to address these challenges and better serve young people.
Collaboration, a Place-Based Model, and Flexible Funding Strengthen Partnerships and Support Community Well-Being: The Youth Opportunity Hubs Model
Historically, organizational silos and constraints in funding opportunities have made it harder for organizations to build on and complement each others’ strengths to holistically serve youth in their communities—organizations tended to be funded to provide particular types of services (education, employment, etc.) and compensated based on those services being successfully delivered, not based on comprehensive supports for young people. The Youth Opportunity Hub initiative was designed to address these constraints and strengthen collaboration through funded partnerships.
A Model for Holistic Public Safety Show Progress: Criminal Justice Investment Initiative
The annual report of the Criminal Justice Investment Initiative shows that CJII has provided transformative support for thousands of people in New York by making significant community-based investments to keep people out of the criminal legal system and help make New York City safer.
Workforce Development Program Creates Pathways to Financial Independence for Survivors of Abuse
New evaluation findings show that Sanctuary for Families’ Career Readiness Training Program is helping intimate partner violence survivors develop professional skills and improve their sense of self by expanding the capacity of its program to create pathways to financial independence.
Expanding Capacity to Better Serve Deaf Survivors of Domestic Violence: Lessons Learned
Through its CJII-funded Deaf Services Initiative, over the past three years Barrier Free Living has improved its support for deaf survivors of abuse by expanding service offerings, enhancing its means of communication support and technology, and engaging community partners in deaf-specific trainings and resources.
When the Criminal Legal System Stands in the Way: Understanding Service Access Barriers for Survivors of Gender-Based Violence
Many survivors of domestic violence do not wish to engage with law enforcement, and yet some services available to them require showing proof of cooperation with the criminal legal system. As part of the City’s broad police reform agenda, ISLG is working to address these barriers and decouple the criminal legal system from essential services. As part of the City’s broad police reform agenda, ISLG is working to address these barriers and decouple the criminal legal system from essential services.
Coming Home to No House: Criminal Records Constrain Housing Access
Criminal records follow people long after they have served their time and often end up as “permanent punishments.” This leads to many collateral consequences, including the significant impact a criminal record has in severely limiting housing options for people leaving incarceration.
Investing in Workforce Development and Systems Change: Social Enterprises
Social enterprises—nonprofits that generate revenue to support their ongoing operations—present an innovative approach to workforce development, with the potential for systems-level impact. The Criminal Justice Investment Initiative (CJII) funded the work of three growing social enterprises: Drive Change, The HOPE Program’s Intervine, and Sweet Generation Bakery.
Fixing and Funding the Service Gap at the Intersection of the Domestic Violence Epidemic & LGBTQIA Community
October marks not only Domestic Violence Awareness Month, but also LGBTQ History Month, calling for us to acknowledge the intersection between this public health epidemic and this historically disadvantaged group.