America - the world's leader in imprisonment

by Gopher 11 Replies latest social current

  • Gopher
    Gopher

    The "tough on crime" folks who brought us the "war on drugs" have finally seen the fruits of their labor. America has the highest rate of incarceration. What a wonderful boon to the prison industry! And what a great use of our tax dollars this is! I can sleep more safely at night now, knowing all the bad guys are put away. They must be, for nowhere else in the world is a higher percentage of people sleeping behind prison bars.

    http://www.startribune.com/nation/16072982.html

    For first time in US history, more than 1 in every 100 Americans is behind bars

    By DAVID CRARY, Associated Press

    Last update: February 28, 2008 - 3:14 PM

    NEW YORK - For the first time in U.S. history, more than one of every 100 adults is in jail or prison, according to a new report documenting America's rank as the world's No. 1 incarcerator. It urges states to curtail corrections spending by placing fewer low-risk offenders behind bars.

    Using state-by-state data, the report says 2,319,258 Americans were in jail or prison at the start of 2008 — one out of every 99.1 adults. Whether per capita or in raw numbers, it's more than any other nation.

    The report, released Thursday by the Pew Center on the States, said the 50 states spent more than $49 billion on corrections last year, up from less than $11 billion 20 years earlier. The rate of increase for prison costs was six times greater than for higher education spending, the report said.

    The steadily growing inmate population "is saddling cash-strapped states with soaring costs they can ill afford and failing to have a clear impact either on recidivism or overall crime," the report said.

    Susan Urahn, managing director of the Pew Center on the States, said budget woes are pressuring many states to consider new, cost-saving corrections policies that might have been shunned in the recent past for fear of appearing soft on crime.

    "We're seeing more and more states being creative because of tight budgets," she said in an interview. "They want to be tough on crime. They want to be a law-and-order state. But they also want to save money, and they want to be effective."

    The report cited Kansas and Texas as states that have acted decisively to slow the growth of their inmate population. They are making greater use of community supervision for low-risk offenders and employing sanctions other than reimprisonment for offenders who commit technical violations of parole and probation rules.

    "The new approach, born of bipartisan leadership, is allowing the two states to ensure they have enough prison beds for violent offenders while helping less dangerous lawbreakers become productive, taxpaying citizens," the report said.

    While many state governments have shown bipartisan interest in curbing prison growth, there also are persistent calls to proceed cautiously.

    "We need to be smarter," said David Muhlhausen, a criminal justice expert with the conservative Heritage Foundation. "We're not incarcerating all the people who commit serious crimes. But we're also probably incarcerating people who don't need to be."

    According to the report, the inmate population increased last year in 36 states and the federal prison system.

    The largest percentage increase — 12 percent — was in Kentucky, where Gov. Steve Beshear highlighted the cost of corrections in his budget speech last month. He noted that the state's crime rate had increased only about 3 percent in the past 30 years, while the state's inmate population has increased by 600 percent.

    The report was compiled by the Pew Center's Public Safety Performance Project, which is working with 13 states on developing programs to divert offenders from prison without jeopardizing public safety.

    "Getting tough on criminals has gotten tough on taxpayers," said the project's director, Adam Gelb.

    According to the report, the average annual cost per prisoner was $23,876, with Rhode Island spending the most ($44,860) and Louisiana the least ($13,009). It said California — which faces a $16 billion budget shortfall — spent $8.8 billion on corrections last year, while Texas, which has slightly more inmates, was a distant second with spending of $3.3 billion.

    On average, states spend 6.8 percent of their general fund dollars on corrections, the report said. Oregon had the highest spending rate, at 10.9 percent; Alabama the lowest at 2.6 percent.

    Four states — Vermont, Michigan, Oregon and Connecticut — now spend more on corrections than they do on higher education, the report said.

    "These sad facts reflect a very distorted set of national priorities," said Sen. Bernie Sanders, an independent from Vermont, referring to the full report. "Perhaps, if we adequately invested in our children and in education, kids who now grow up to be criminals could become productive workers and taxpayers."

    The report said prison growth and higher incarceration rates do not reflect an increase in the nation's overall population. Instead, it said, more people are behind bars mainly because of tough sentencing measures, such as "three-strikes" laws, that result in longer prison stays.

    "For some groups, the incarceration numbers are especially startling," the report said. "While one in 30 men between the ages of 20 and 34 is behind bars, for black males in that age group the figure is one in nine."

    The racial disparity for women also is stark. One of every 355 white women aged 35 to 39 is behind bars, compared with one of every 100 black women in that age group.

    The nationwide figures, as of Jan. 1, include 1,596,127 people in state and federal prisons and 723,131 in local jails. That's out of almost 230 million American adults.

    The report said the United States incarcerates more people than any other nation, far ahead of more populous China with 1.5 million people behind bars. It said the U.S. also is the leader in inmates per capita (750 per 100,000 people), ahead of Russia (628 per 100,000) and other former Soviet bloc nations which round out the Top 10.

    The U.S. also is among the world leaders in capital punishment. According to Amnesty International, its 53 executions in 2006 were exceeded only by China, Iran, Pakistan, Iraq and Sudan.

    ___

    On the Net:

    http://www.pewcenteronthestates.org.

  • IP_SEC
    IP_SEC

    Yep, saddest thing I've seen all week. The War on Drugs makes criminals out of ppl who need help for the most part. Makes a criminal out of a decent person who just so happens to have a pound of a certain herbaceous plant in his trunk. sucks.

  • willdabeerman
    willdabeerman

    Well you see. Instead of rehabbing those that should be healed and focusing on what they need to focus on the US is to busy crashing $1.2 billion dollar planes and detonating $9.6 million dollar missiles.

  • Gopher
    Gopher

    America has taken its eye off the ball. They're dealing with symptoms by excessive punishment of wrongdoers, rather than working to make the education system better as other industrialized countries have.

    This quote from Senator Sanders nailed it. Just remove the word "perhaps" and he'd be right.

    "These sad facts reflect a very distorted set of national priorities," said Sen. Bernie Sanders, an independent from Vermont, referring to the full report. "Perhaps, if we adequately invested in our children and in education, kids who now grow up to be criminals could become productive workers and taxpayers."

    Time magazine just ran a series of articles on teachers and education. America could learn how to invest its education dollars properly by looking at the excellent results in places like Norway, Finland, Singapore and Canada.

    http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1713557,00.html

    How They Do It Abroad

    Thursday, Feb. 14, 2008 By LINDA DARLING-HAMMOND alt A challenging curriculum is emphasized at Tammersoken Luko High School in Finland, where students conduct an experiment in a natural-sciences class

    When school starts each year, the most important question on the minds of parents and children is, Who will my teacher be? The concern is well founded. Researchers have discovered that school's deepest influence on learning depends on the quality of the teacher. Students lucky enough to have teachers who know their content and how to teach it well achieve more. And the effects of a very good (or very poor) teacher last beyond a single year, influencing a student's learning for years. Put simply, expert teachers are the most fundamental resource for improving education.

    This lesson has been well learned by societies that top international rankings in education. The highest-achieving countries--Finland, Sweden, Ireland, the Netherlands, Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, Japan, Australia, New Zealand and Canada--have been pouring resources into teacher training and support. These countries routinely prepare their teachers more extensively, pay them well in relation to competing occupations and give them lots of time for professional learning. They also provide well-trained teachers for all students--rather than allowing some to be taught by untrained novices--by offering equitable salaries and adding incentives for harder-to-staff locations.

    All teacher candidates in Finland, Sweden, Norway and the Netherlands, for example, receive two to three years of graduate-level preparation for teaching, at government expense, plus a living stipend. Unlike the U.S., where teachers either go into debt to prepare for a profession that will pay them poorly or enter with little or no training, these countries made the decision to invest in a uniformly well-prepared teaching force by recruiting top candidates and paying them while they receive extensive training. With its steep climb in the international rankings, Finland has been a poster child for school improvement. Teachers learn how to create programs that engage students in research and inquiry on a regular basis. There, training focuses on how to teach students who learn in different ways--including those with special needs. The Finns reason that if teachers learn to help students who struggle, they will be able to teach their students more effectively.

    Singapore, top-ranked in math by the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study, treats teaching similarly. When I visited Singapore's National Institute of Education, the nation's only teacher-training institution, nearly all the people I spoke with described how they were investing in teachers' abilities to teach a curriculum focused on critical thinking and inquiry--skills needed in a high-tech economy. To get the best teachers, the institute recruits students from the top third of each graduating high school class into a fully paid four-year teacher-education program (or, if they enter later, a one-to-two-year graduate program) and puts them on the government's payroll. When they enter the profession, teachers' salaries are higher than those of beginning doctors.

    Expert teachers are given time to serve as mentors to help beginners learn their craft. The government pays for 100 hours of professional development each year for all teachers. In addition, they have 20 hours a week to work with other teachers and visit one another's classrooms. And teachers continue to advance throughout their career. With aid from the government, teachers in Singapore can pursue three separate career ladders, which help them become curriculum specialists, mentors for other teachers or school principals. These opportunities bring recognition, extra compensation and new challenges that keep teaching exciting and allow teachers to share their expertise.

    Most U.S. teachers, on the other hand, have no time to work with colleagues during the school day. They plan by themselves and get a few hit-and-run workshops after school, with little opportunity to share knowledge or improve their practice. In a study of mathematics teaching and learning in Japan, Taiwan and the U.S., James Stigler and Harold Stevenson noted that "Asian class lessons are so well crafted [because] there is a very systematic effort to pass on the accumulated wisdom of teaching practice to each new generation of teachers and to keep perfecting that practice by providing teachers the opportunities to continually learn from each other."

    With these kinds of investments, it is possible to ensure that every teacher has access to the knowledge he or she needs to teach effectively and that every child has access to competent teachers. Such a goal is critical for the U.S. if it is indeed to leave no child behind.

    Darling-Hammond is the Charles E. Ducommun professor of education at Stanford University

  • beksbks
    beksbks
    "Perhaps, if we adequately invested in our children and in education, kids who now grow up to be criminals could become productive workers and taxpayers."

    Ohhhh this must be the "socialism" that the conservatives keeping complaining about. This would be "giving all their money away", hmm?

    PS Gopher, do you hate America????

  • BurnTheShips
    BurnTheShips

    Victimless "crimes" need to be decriminalized. Keep the prisons for the real crimes, the murderers, rapists, and thieves. Use the new capacity to house the white collar crooks that are doing the real damage.

    What I smoke in the privacy of my own home is no ones business but mine. The drug war bureaucracy is firmly, firmly entrenched however. Good luck uprooting that one.

    And it ought to be remembered that there is nothing more difficult to take in hand, more perilous to conduct, or more uncertain in its success, then to take the lead in the introduction of a new order of things. Because the innovator has for enemies all those who have done well under the old conditions, and lukewarm defenders in those who may do well under the new.
  • Gopher
    Gopher

    Hey beks,

    Yes I hate America so much, that I want to see it invest wisely in teacher-training programs, and pay them for year-round education so that America can keep up with the European and Asian countries. I hate America so much, that I want to see the really violent people behind bars and not those who chose a type of medication that is illegal. Yes my hatred runs really deep!

    BTS, you are so right about decriminalization. I recognize your quote as being from Machiavelli, and he realized the difficulty of change. America is distracted with so many unsolved social problems, that surely we won't see a more careful calibration of the criminal-justice system anytime soon. So I guess we'll get to keep our #1 incarceration ranking for a while. At least we're #1 in something these days.

  • heathen
    heathen

    I think the saddest part is the US government lets the drugs in only to entrap people anyway. It's all about getting money from the prison system . I'm all for keeping crack dealers off the streets tho . There are parts of the country where people will stand on the corner and literally try to sell drugs to cars driving by. I'm all for legalizing hemp and prostitution tho.

  • snowbird
    snowbird

    "For some groups, the incarceration numbers are especially startling," the report said. "While one in 30 men between the ages of 20 and 34 is behind bars, for black males in that age group the figure is one in nine."

    There is nothing surprising about that. On a side note, it used to irritate the heck out of me when WT publications would go on and on about the imprisonment of JF Rutherford and associates.

    I would think to myself, there are so many people who have been unjustly incarcerated, what makes them think this was such an awful occurrence?

    That was one of those little niggling things that began to add to the heap of dissonance I was experiencing.

    Sylvia

  • IP_SEC
    IP_SEC
    I'm all for keeping crack dealers off the streets tho .

    Then the gov should stop trying to be momma and legalize it.

    People dont buy Coke ™ from dealers on the street. Why? Its legal, they can get it in any store. If Coke™ were illegal, you would have dealers on the street for it and people would be going to jail for buying and selling it.

    If coke, or pot or whateva else were legal, you would have no pushers. It would be dirt cheap and ppl would have to STEAL your stuff to be able to get a fix. We would also have way less non-violent offenders in the prison system.

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