PRISON FELLOWSHIP BLOG: Advocacy & Reentry

  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Reentry
Rising Up from Prison

When it comes to helping prisoners transition successfully to life in their communities, some of the most important work occurs well before these men and women ever leave the correctional facility. In the most recent post to our video blog series, field director Denise Harris talks about some of the great things happening with Prison Fellowship’s intensive, in-prison programming.

By Steve Rempe
May 26, 2016
denise harris | Huron Valley Correctional Facility | Michigan | Sisters on the Rise | Video Blog | volunteer
The return - feature
  • Reentry
  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Feature Stories
The Struggles of ‘The Return’

“I paid my debt to society. I paid my restitution. I stayed out of trouble. Why is my criminal history always going to be at the forefront of who I am? It doesn’t define who I am anymore. To be brutally honest that bothers me, and hurts me, and worries me, but I can’t crumble.

By Steve Rempe
May 24, 2016
California | Kenneth Anderson | Michael Romano | PBS | POV | The Return | Three Strikes Law | Three Strikes Project
  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Reentry
No Turning Back

A significant number of cities in the United States reported an increase in homicide rates in 2015—a disturbing trend that some have claimed marks the end of a period that saw historic reductions in violent crimes in places like New York City and Chicago.

By Steve Rempe
May 23, 2016
Chicago | Craig DeRoche | homicide | homicide rates | Marco Rubio | New York | Washington Examiner
  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Reentry
Running Together for a Cause

In some ways, the races seemed like any other 5K competitions that take place every weekend across the country. The runners laced up their shoes and stretched in preparation for the run, affixing their bib numbers and hoping for fast times.

By Steve Rempe
May 20, 2016
Colorado | Jesse Wiese | John Turnipseed | Lino Lakes | Minnesota | Second Chances 5k | Second Prison Project | Shakopee | Stillwater
Cage idea feature image
  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Feature Stories
  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Reentry
Rethinking Incarceration

In 1994, Congress passed a crime bill that strengthened penalties for drug offenses and earmarked billions of dollars for new prison construction. Prison populations across the country boomed as a result, with recidivism rates remaining high.  Drug offenses became the leading reason for incarceration, but prisons nationwide struggled to provide programming capable of breaking the cycle of incarceration, release, and rearrest.  

By Steve Rempe
May 18, 2016
Drug Programs | mandatory minimums | massachusetts | recidivism | Reentry | rehabilitation | South Bay House of Corrections
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Reentry
A Transformation to Greater Things

At his graduation from the Assemblies of God Theological Seminary in Springfield, Missouri, John Alarid stood out from his fellow classmates. It wasn’t his height or demeanor that separated him, nor was it something pithy and entertaining written in tape on his graduation cap.

By Steve Rempe
May 17, 2016
John Alarid | Mark Hausfield | Missouri | Springfield
  • Reentry
  • Advocacy & Reentry
Making the Most of a Second Chance

David Padilla knew that he deserved to be punished for the drug dealing of his youth. But he didn’t see how it would benefit the community—or his wife Lisette and their four children—for him to die in prison.

After his third drug-related offense resulted in a life sentence, Padilla set out to become a model resident of the federal prison system.

By Alyson R. Quinn
May 16, 2016
David Padilla | Men in Motion in the Community | Pennsylvania | Philadelphia | Second Chances | sentencing
  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Angel Tree
Remembering the Children

When a mom or dad is sentenced to time behind bars, the intent is to punish that person for criminal behavior, and, hopefully, to deter them from future crimes. What is too often forgotten is that while they might go to prison alone, incarcerated parents aren’t the only ones that pay the price for their past behavior.

By Steve Rempe
May 12, 2016
children of prisoners | Family
  • Advocacy & Reentry
Finding Your Identity

What is the best way to keep young people in troubled areas away from criminal behavior? A new book suggests that one of the keys is identifying a hobby or activity that will draw attention away from illicit activity and give youth a meaning and purpose that transcends their current environment.

By Steve Rempe
May 11, 2016
identity project. | Juvenile Justice | Maryland | Stephanie DeLuca | Susan Clampet-Lundquist | thetrace.org
Danny Amos feature
  • Reentry
  • Feature Stories
Rediscovering Innocence

When Danny Amos left prison, he entered a world that was exceedingly bizarre and foreign to him. Having spent five decades behind bars, Danny had never bought his own clothes, and didn’t even know his size. Something as common to most of us as the automatic doors at WalMart were the source of endless amazement to him.

By Steve Rempe
May 11, 2016
Danny Amos | KARE-TV | Wisconsin
Name tag ex-con feature
  • Reentry
  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Feature Stories
What’s in a Name?

Titles and labels serve an important role in modern society. It is unlikely anyone would submit to surgery to someone who didn’t respond to the title “doctor,” and few of us would let anyone touch our finances if they didn’t have the initials “C.P.A.”

By Steve Rempe
May 10, 2016
department of justice | Karol Mason | Office of Justice Programs | Second Prison Project
  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Reentry
The Myth of ‘Them’

It is becoming harder and harder for who have never had a criminal record to think that they can isolate themselves from those that have. Even if there might have been a time when crime was restricted to certain neighborhoods or classes, the growing conviction and incarceration rates makes it increasingly rarer that an individual would not be in contact with a friend, a neighbor, or a family member who has a criminal past.

By Steve Rempe
May 6, 2016
Colorado | Colorado Springs | Colorado Springs Gazette | Jesse Wiese | Second Prison Project
Together we bake feature
  • Reentry
  • Feature Stories
Working for a Second Chance

Based just outside of Washington, D.C., in Alexandria, Virginia, Together We Bake is more than a typical bakery.

In addition to producing granola, cookies, and other baked goods for grocery stores and restaurants in the metro D.C. area, Together We Bake creates something much more lasting—second chances for women, many of whom are attempting to reenter the workforce after a period of incarceration.

By Steve Rempe
May 3, 2016
ServSafe | Stephanie Wright | Together We Bake | Tricia Sabatini | Virginia
  • Reentry
  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
Paving the Road to Redemption

Prison Fellowship Director of Community Engagement Jesse Wiese and former Minnesota Governor Al Quie recently penned an editorial for the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, highlighting the challenges that hundreds of thousands of men and women face nationwide when they return to their communities from prison. 

By Steve Rempe
April 29, 2016
Jesse Wiese | Minneapolis | Minnesota | Second Chances 5k | Second Prison Project | Star-Tribune
  • Press Releases
  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Reentry
Twin Cities Second Chances 5K Supports Those with Criminal Records

Part of New Prison Fellowship Campaign to Expose and Eliminate “Second Prison” for 65 Million Americans with Criminal Records

ST. PAUL, Minn., April 26, 2016—Hundreds of thousands of Minnesotans with a criminal record continually face significant legal, social and other barriers that inhibit them from fully contributing to society.

By Steve Rempe
April 27, 2016
Concordia University | Lino Lakes | Minnesota | Second Prison Project | Shakopee | St. Paul | Stillwater
  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 23
  • 24
  • 25
  • 26
  • 27
  • …
  • 38
  • Next Page »

SELECT A TOPIC

  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Angel Tree
  • Families of Prisoners
  • Feature Stories
  • From the CEO
  • Hope Events
  • Inside Journal
  • Press Releases
  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Prison Fellowship Academy
  • Prison Fellowship International
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Reentry
  • Second Chance Month
  • Uncategorized
  • Video
  • Warden Exchange

MOST POPULAR

Prison Fellowship Leads Nationwide Day of Action Urging Congress To Pass Second Chance Month Resolution

April 14, 2026

Prison Fellowship Honors Pat Nolan with 2026 Charles Colson Advocate of Hope Award at Ceremony in Washington, DC.

April 10, 2026

A Grandmother’s Gratitude: Sharon’s Story

April 8, 2026

PRISON FELLOWSHIP IN THE NEWS

View our latest press releases and hear what other publications are saying about Prison Fellowship and our programs.

    Why Second Chances Matter
    Why Christians Must Reject the Throw Away the Key Mindset
    Oklahoma Woman Pushes for Second Chances After Prison
    Miller, Colleagues Celebrate Bipartisan Resolution Declaring April as Second Chance Month
VIEW MORE NEWS

LATEST VIDEOS

Watch all videos