Practice Goals/Practice Components
Prison visitation, a longstanding feature of the U.S. prison system, allows incarcerated individuals the opportunity to meet with family and friends to help sustain connections and social supports. One of the main goals of prison visitation is to reduce recidivism of individuals once they are released from incarceration.
There are two primary types of prison visitation: 1) in-person, and 2) conjugal/furlough. In-person visits can take many forms, depending on the correctional facility, including face-to-face conversations through glass partitions or brief contact (i.e., no overnights) in an open visiting room. Conjugal/furlough visits allow individuals to spend an extended amount of time, usually overnight, with family members, and in mobile homes or other structures that are separate from the general prison population. However, only the following states presently offer conjugal or overnight visits: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Nebraska, New York, South Dakota, and Washington.
Prison visitation may also vary by correctional facility. For example, some prisons may use visitation as a privilege for good behavior or may have a strict screening process and criteria that are used to determine who is eligible to visit (for instance, a visitor can be disqualified from visiting if they provide false or inaccurate information, or if they have a criminal history).
Practice Theory
There are two theoretical perspectives that have been suggested to explain the relationship between prison visitation and successful reentry for adults: social bonds theory and strain theory. Social bonds theory posits that prison visitation can help maintain or strengthen positive social bonds through face-to-face interaction, which can help to prevent incarcerated individuals from engaging in further criminal behavior upon their release. Further, visitation can offer individuals the opportunity to preserve or restore relationships that were severed as a result of their incarceration (Mitchell, Spooner, and Zhang 2016; Mears et al. 2011).
With regard to strain theory, in-prison visitation may help individuals cope with the strain they feel both during and after incarceration. Visitations can reduce individuals’ feelings of frustration, anger, and hopelessness associated with the loss of their ties to families or friends (Mitchell, Spooner, and Zhang 2016; Mears et al. 2011).