From IPS:
The research wing of the U.S. Congress is warning that three decades of
“historically unprecedented” build-up in the number of prisoners incarcerated in
the United States have led to a level of overcrowding that is now “taking a toll
on the infrastructure” of the federal prison system.
Over the past 30 years, according to a new report by the Congressional
Research Service (CRS), the federal prison population has jumped from 25,000 to
219,000 inmates, an increase of nearly 790 percent. Swollen by such figures, for
years the United States has incarcerated far more people than any other country,
today imprisoning some 716 people out of every 100,000. (Although CRS reports
are not made public, a copy can be found here.)
“This is one of the major human rights problems within the United States, as
many of the people caught up in the criminal justice system are low income,
racial and ethnic minorities, often forgotten by society,” Maria McFarland,
deputy director for the U.S. programme at Human Rights Watch, told IPS.
In recent years, as a consequence of the imposition of very harsh sentencing
policies, McFarland’s office has seen new patterns emerging of juveniles and
very elderly people being put in prison.
“Last year, some 95,000 juveniles under 18 years of age were put in prison,
and that doesn't count those in juvenile facilities,” she noted.
“And between 2007 and 2011, the population of those over 64 grew by 94 times
the rate of the regular population. Prisons clearly aren’t equipped to take care
of these aging people, and you have to question what threat they pose to society
– and the justification for imprisoning them.”
According to the new CRS report, a growing number of these prisoners are
being put away for charges related to immigration violations and weapons
possession. But the largest number is for relatively paltry drug offences – an
approach that report author Nathan James, a CRS analyst in crime policy, warns
may not be useful in bringing down crime statistics.
“Research suggests that while incarceration did contribute to lower violent
crime rates in the 1990s, there are declining marginal returns associated with
ever increasing levels of incarceration,” James notes. He suggests that one
potential explanation for this could be that people have been increasingly
incarcerated for crimes in which there is a “high level of replacement”.
For instance, he says, if a serial rapist is incarcerated, the judicial
system has the power to prevent further sexual assaults by that offender, and it
is likely that no one will take the offender’s place. “However, if a drug dealer
is incarcerated, it is possible that someone will step in to take that person’s
place,” James writes. “Therefore, no further crimes may be averted by
incarcerating the individual.”
Smarter on crime
Of course, the U.S. prison population’s blooming needs to be traced back to
changes within the federal criminal justice system. Recent decades have seen an
expanding “get tough” approach on crime here, under which even nonviolent
offenders are facing stiff prison sentences.
In turn, overcrowding has become a massive issue, with the federal prison
system as a whole operating at 39 percent over capacity in 2011, according to
CRS. The result has also been significant price overruns, with the Bureau of
Prisons budget doubling to nearly 6.4 billion dollars even while hundreds of
millions of dollars worth of unaddressed infrastructure problems continue to
mount.
Yet the problems being experienced by the federal prison system actually
stand in contrast to certain trends at the state level. While some states have
dealt with even more worrisome problems of prison overcrowding – including
California, which in 2011 was ordered by the U.S. Supreme Court to take steps to
reduce the pressure – recent years have seen movement at the state level to
counter over-incarceration.
Some of this action may have come from serious state budget crises.
Currently, after all, it costs between 25,000 and 30,000 dollars to house a
prisoner in the United States.
According to a new
report by the Sentencing Project, a Washington advocacy group working on
prison reform, prisoner populations in the United States overall declined by
around 1.5 percent in 2011. Furthermore, last year lawmakers in 24 states
adopted policies that “may contribute to downscaling prison populations”.
“There has been a marked change in the amount of activity at the state level
to end our addiction to incarceration,” Vineeta Gupta, deputy legal director
with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), told IPS.
“Some states are currently having many discussions they would not have had 10
years ago – getting smarter on crime rather than tougher on crime. None of these
moves are comprehensive enough to address the large scope of the problem, but
they’re very important starting points.”
She continued: “Unfortunately, the federal government has been going in the
opposite direction.”
Full article can be found here.
1 comment:
maybe they should be moved to a bigger place. overcrowding may have several bad effects to the inmates.
Post a Comment