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Changing views on crime, from Central Asia to the South Pacific

1. United States

A college program for formerly incarcerated students is giving graduates a meaningful path forward after prison. Project Rebound, a California State University program, began in 1967 at San Francisco State University and expanded to eight more schools in 2016, after a massive philanthropic push. Today 15 Cal State Universities offer the program, which provides reintegration support in addition to higher education. In the academic years 2016-2023, 749 formerly incarcerated students have earned degrees, including two doctorates. Statewide, about 10,000 inmates are in college.

Project Rebound students have a recidivism rate of less than 1% within three years of release, compared to 46% for the entire state. This year a majority of the students – 66% – are funding their education through Pell Grants, 65% are first-generation college students, and 38% are parents of minor children.   

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In our progress roundup, evolving perspectives on relationships become new laws. Domestic violence is now a crime in Uzbekistan, while gay men gain legal protection in the Cook Islands.

“When you get that first ‘A,’ for those of us who feel pretty bad about ourselves, sometimes for the first time in our life, that’s a moment of like, ‘Oh, maybe I’m not as bad as I thought,’” said Travis Durbin, a graduate of the program. “Then you get another success, and another success and another success.”
Sources: PBS, Project Rebound Consortium

2. Cook Islands

Cook Islands has decriminalized sex between men. Parliament amended the Crimes Act of 1969, which made same-sex relations a crime punishable by up to seven years in prison, although it was rarely enforced. The legislation also strengthens rape laws by eliminating marriage as a defense.

The small nation of 15,000 people joins the Marshall Islands, Fiji, Palau, and Nauru in eliminating colonial-era sodomy laws – but homosexual acts remain illegal in six other Pacific Island nations.

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