USA - Incarceration nation: 1 in 31 U.S. adults now in criminal justice system - Drugs Forum
Drugs-Forum  
News Groups Blog Forum Chat Video Audio Images Documents Wiki Home
Go Back   Drugs Forum > VARIOUS DRUG RELATED TOPICS > Drug News > Justice & Law (News)
Register Tags Mark Forums Read

Notices

Justice & Law (News) News about drug busts, bans, court cases, and law enforcement.

 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Prev Previous Post   Next Post Next
  #1  
Old 02-03-2009, 22:51
Heretic.Ape.'s Avatar
Heretic.Ape. Heretic.Ape. is offline
Heretic.Ape. is in temicxoch
Big Brother
Super Moderator
 
Join Date: 17-04-2007
Location: Left at Albuquerque
Age: 29
Posts: 2,898
Blog Entries: 16
Heretic.Ape. must mainline MedlineHeretic.Ape. must mainline MedlineHeretic.Ape. must mainline MedlineHeretic.Ape. must mainline MedlineHeretic.Ape. must mainline MedlineHeretic.Ape. must mainline MedlineHeretic.Ape. must mainline MedlineHeretic.Ape. must mainline MedlineHeretic.Ape. must mainline MedlineHeretic.Ape. must mainline MedlineHeretic.Ape. must mainline Medline
Points: 12,994, Level: 16 Points: 12,994, Level: 16 Points: 12,994, Level: 16
Activity: 0% Activity: 0% Activity: 0%
Incarceration nation: 1 in 31 U.S. adults now in criminal justice system

The U.S. criminal justice system is tapping out state budgets while failing to make the public safe, but most people don’t care until it affects them directly. If the numbers keep growing, it won’t be long before practically everyone is. A study released today by the Pew Center on the States shows that 7.3 million people — 1 in 31 U.S. adults — are now locked up or on parole or probation. In Michigan, it’s one in 27 people. In one neighborhood on Detroit’s east side, one in seven adult men is in the system.


Our policies on crime and punishment aren't working and we can no longer afford them. Over the past two decades, state general fund spending on corrections has more than tripled to $68 billion a year. That means a lot less money for education, health care and other essential government services. Michigan spends $2 billion a year on corrections — more than it spends on higher education.


Despite this investment, recidivism and crimes rates have not gone down. My own feeling is that mass incarceration has increased crime by disrupting families, neighborhoods and social networks. In Michigan today, one in six adults has a felony on his or her record. One in 14 African American children has an incarcerated parent, making it seven times more likely that they, too, will go to prison.


What people forget is that nearly everyone sent to prison will get out. Roughly 600,000 people a year leave prison or jail and return to their communities, many of them unable to find work. Mass incarceration has made prison a norm in certain neighborhoods. My brother-in-law, who’s 34 and grew up on Detroit’s east side, told me once that every male peer he knew coming up went to prison or jail. For many young men, going to prison has become almost an expectation, a rite of passage.


The Pew report also notes that it costs, on average, 22 times more to lock offenders up than to supervise them in community programs like probation and parole than it does to lock them up. Diverting more lower-risk, non-violent offenders to community programs makes dollars and sense. It would lower corrections costs and enable states to spend more on education and other government services.


We need to find a better way. It’s troubling and puzzling that many of the same people who attack government inefficiency give our costly and ineffective criminal justice system a pass by pushing for more of the same. Online at www.pewcenteronthestates.org


Nice to see we're pushing the envelope from the 1 in a 100 from just a little while ago
h.a.
Reply With Quote
 

Bookmarks

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Methamphetamine and The Criminal Justice System (Essay) iFeaRNLoathiNg Law and order 1 19-01-2007 21:44
USA - Article: The GOP's $3 Billion Propaganda Organ ~lostgurl~ Drug Policy Reform & Narco Politics 2 28-12-2006 14:35
New Zealand - Government Speech: Addiction -Effective Interventions, Criminal Justice System ~lostgurl~ Drug Policy Reform & Narco Politics 0 03-11-2006 09:03
The US Gulag Prison System motorhead Law and order 1 03-04-2006 21:53
Flaws In Criminal Justice System (Texas) BlueMystic Miscellaneous News 0 14-07-2005 08:33


Sitelinks: Site Functions:

All times are GMT +1. The time now is 23:27.


Copyright: Substance Information Network 2003 - 2009, All rights reserved