“…These findings are consistent with research on the economic, social, and drug-related challenges that incarcerated drug-using women face when released into communities where they lack social support and financial opportunities (Karberg & James, 2005; Richie, 2001; Robbins, Martin, & Surratt, 2009; Van Olphen, Eliason, Freudenberg, & Barnes, 2009; Yasunaga, 2001). The experiences of women in our sample support arguments that the U.S. criminal justice system needs evidence-based drug treatment services for minority women (Adams, Leukefeld, & Peden, 2008; Chandler, Fletcher, & Volkow, 2009; Gordon, Kinlock, Schwartz, & O’Grady, 2008), including drug treatment and other health and social programs for parolees reentering communities (Prendergast, 2009; Richie; Robbins et al; Sarteschi & Vaughn, 2010). Our findings suggest that women could have benefitted from sustained drug treatment services in U.S. prisons/detention centers, and following their deportations; however, none of our respondents had accessed drug treatment or other reentry services in the United States or Mexico.…”