Confronting the Collateral Consequences of a Criminal Conviction: A Special Challenge for Social Work with Offenders

Abstract

Millions of former offenders—often members of racial/ethnic minority or other disenfranchised groups—experience restrictions on their legal and civil rights as the collateral consequences of their criminal conviction. It is critical for the social workers and other human service professionals who frequently interface with this population to understand these collateral consequences to effectively serve their clients with criminal convictions. This exploratory study examined the impact these collateral consequences may have on social work practice with offenders. We assessed practitioners\u27 awareness, knowledge, and experiences with the collateral consequences of clients\u27 criminal convictions and practitioner efforts as “agents of restoration” to pursue statutorily available court-ordered expungements of their clients\u27 criminal conviction records. Findings revealed that practitioners lacked awareness of collateral consequences, their application, and expungement. Recommendations to enhance social work practitioners\u27 ability to address and reduce the far-reaching collateral consequences of incurring a criminal conviction are discusse

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