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Lloyd Sealy Library
John Jay College of Criminal Justice

Reentry, Probation and Parole

Issues and resources related to persons or individuals with prior justice system involvement as well as those currently on probation, parole or other community or correctional supervision and their social, cultural, economic and physical reintegration int

Books

Open Book with Letters and Numbers flying out of it

Books Provide:

Dedicated treatment

Historical overview

Background information

Single view or opinion

 

 

Finding Books

Use OneSearch to find both print and electronic books in John Jay's Lloyd Sealy Library as well as other CUNY libraries.  The search box can be found on our library's homepage.  Click on the image below:

 

To search for books only, you may want to limit your search by clicking inside the circle to the left of Books (see above) although it is not necessary.  You may also limit your search to books once you have retrieved a list of relevant sources.

Search for a particular book using the exact title or author, or a combination of distinctive words from each to determine if our library owns the exact book you want.  If we do not own that title, click here for information on getting books from other CUNY campus libraries through CLICS.

To search for books on a specific subject, type in keyword(s) and/or phrase(s) which best describe your topic.  Broaden or narrow your search if you're dissatisfied with your results.

Click on the title of those books you find relevant.

For print books:  write down the CALL NUMBER and LOCATION of the books you wish to find in the library.  Books are organized according to their location and call number:

Reference  (2nd floor, top level)

Reference Law (2nd floor, south side of building near bound periodicals)

Stacks  (books that circulate, see below)

Call number beginning with A-H are on the 2nd floor

Call number beginning with J-Z are on the 1st floor

Reserve (1st floor, Reserve desk)

For electronic booksPlease remember, not every book is digitized!  We do have a large collection of ebook titles and ebook collections available remotely (from your home or work computer, phone, etc.). 

If a book is available electronically, you will see a Available online link in OneSearch.  Use your John Jay email username (firstname.lastname) and password to login once you are taken to the book's database site.

To set up your John Jay email account or if you are experiencing difficulties with your John Jay email username and password, go to reset.jjay.cuny.edu to set up and/or change your password.  If you are still experiencing problems, contact the DoIt Helpdesk at 212.237.8200 for further assistance.  

(Please keep in mind, as a general rule, electronic books owned by specific CUNY libraries other than John Jay are most probably only available to John Jay students onsite--within that owning library using their computers.  Ebooks marked CUNY should be available online to all CUNY students.)

Please see our Ebooks library guide for more information for finding and using electronic books.

Subject Headings

Search All Fields (the default in CUNY+) using the keyword reentry (or re-entry), parole and/or probation*.

You may narrow your search by adding keywords/phrases such as juvenile, women, education, employment

You may search using any of the following related keywords with or without the word reentry: 

deinstitutionalization

probation

restorative justice

ex-convicts

women ex-convicts

offenders

ex-offenders

parole

rehabilitation

community-based corrections

victim’s rights

public safety

health

substance abuse

violence

mental illness

housing employment

race

gender

economics

Click on the SUBJECT HEADINGS listed for those books you find relevant in order to find additional books for that same subject heading.

*reetry is not an "official" subject heading according to the Library of Congress.

How to read a call number

Books on a Library Shelf

Every book has a unique Library of Congress call number. Think of the call number as the address of the book, in that it tells us exactly where, on the shelves, we can expect to find a particular book. Books are arranged alphanumerically on the shelves--first alphabetically, then numerically--by call number. 

For instance:

HA          Alphabetical by letter(s)
1625      All HA books shelved in numerical order
.O87       Further ordered alphanumerically by letter then decimal
1999      Year of publication

 

Four books, HA 100..., HA 1625..., HQ 16..., HV 2000...

 

The four books above are in the correct order.

See the complete list of Library of Congress subject classes and subclasses here:http://www.loc.gov/catdir/cpso/lcco/lcco.html