Posted on 06/01/2015 7:58:39 AM PDT by Academiadotorg
How many academics does it take to fix Americas criminal justice system? Twenty.
Thats how many participated in a National Research Council (NRC) study of U. S. prisons and their effect on inner cities. They study was conducted under the auspices of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS).
After decades of stability, U.S. federal and state prison populations escalated steadily between 1973 and 2009, growing from about 200,000 people to 1.5 million, they found. The increase was driven by changes in policy that imprisoned people for a wider range of offenses and imposed longer sentences.
Has this greater reliance on incarceration yielded significant benefits for the nation, or is a change in course needed? A committee of the National Research Council examined the best available evidence and found no clear evidence that greater reliance on imprisonment achieved its intended goal of substantially reducing crime. Moreover, the rise in incarceration may have had a wide range of unwanted consequences for society, communities, families, and individuals. The committees report, The Growth of Incarceration in the United States: Exploring Causes and Consequences, urges policymakers to reduce the nations reliance on incarceration and seek crime-control strategies that are more effective, with fewer unwanted consequences.
One of the score of scholars who contributed to the report, University of Michigan historian Heather Ann Thompson, outlined the groups findings in an appearance at the Center for American Progress on May 28, 2015. Among the crime-control strategies they recommend: more housing.
Yet and still, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) reported in 2009 that The federal government commits substantial resources to support housing and mortgage markets through a combination of spending programs and tax expenditures (that is, subsidies conveyed through reductions in taxes). During the crisis of the past two years, the budgetary commitment expandedto about $300 billion in fiscal year 2009from the placement into conservatorship in September 2008 of the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) and the creation of new housing programs.
It should be noted that at the time that the CBO delivered this report, it was effectively under control of the Democratic Party which dominated the Congress.
How many prisons are located in inner cities anyway?
Thankfully it wasn't conducted under the auspices of the Nationally Academy of Spelling or who knows what kind of wacky findings they would've come up with.
The increase was driven by changes in policy that imprisoned people for a wider range of offenses and imposed longer sentences.
What? No mention of ‘undocumented’ prisoners or the escalation in that time period, for drug abuse and trafficking convictions?
Some ‘study’.
Big government surely has been busy. Now, US has by far the highest per capita rate of imprisonment of any county.
Blaming imprisonment on moral decline doesn’t seem logical because it does not explain why non-Christian Europe doesn’t have a higher rate of imprisonment.
The incarceration rate is clearly a reflection of comparatively (with respect to the rest of the world) longer sentences and the criminalization of drug possession.
That being said, it is extremely doubtful the these academics would propose solutions that would result in less government.
Being conservative doesn’t mean that you reflexively believe in having the world’s largest per capital imprisonment rate.
sheesh, sorry, thanks for the catch
Let me guess:
1) the ‘problem’ is high incarceration rates of blacks.
2) the solution is ‘more funding’
Did I get it right?
(I doubt there was any mention of the high CRIME COMMISION RATE of blacks)
uhhh..... movies like Dirty Harry and Death Wish became runaway hits in the 1970’s. Why? Because crime was OUT OF CONTROL. The country elected Reagan and a new get-tough, law and order attitude. And when you start convicting more criminals they have to go somewhere (unless you execute them all, which I’m sure these academics would not advocate)
Guess you need a PhD from Harvard to be that clueless.
Not any day soon but one day.
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