23 new reports on policing, crime, race, and more.

Criminal Justice Research Library for June 8, 2023 Bringing you the latest in empirical research about mass incarceration

We've added 23 new reports to the Research Library:

Community Impact

Conditions of Confinement

Crime and Crime Rates

Economics of Incarceration

Health impact

Jails

  • Reformers Looking To Intervene in Mass Incarceration Must Understand the Role of Rural County Jails by Sarah Walton, May, 2023
    "In communities that lack alternatives, jails may become a catchall solution to local health and economic crises...healthcare facilities, schools, employers, and housing agencies are all necessary partners in addressing rising rural jail incarceration." Read more in Sarah Walton, "The Gateway to Mass Incarceration: A County-Level Analysis of Jails in the United States," Ohio State University, forthcoming.

LGBT

Police and Policing

  • Justice Navigator Public Assessments by Center for Policing Equity, December, 2022
    This platform contains analyses of policing data from seven participating departments across the country, to identify which policing practices have patterns of racial disparities, and what factors may be contributing to those disparities.

Probation and parole

Race and ethnicity

  • Criminal Convictions in New York State, 1980-2021 by Data Collaborative for Justice at John Jay College, May, 2023
    "Relative to their representation in the residential population, the conviction rate in 2019 for Black people statewide was 3.1 times higher than for white people."

Recidivism and Reentry

Sentencing Policy and Practices

Trials

  • Cost of Discretion: Judicial Decision-Making, Pretrial Detention, and Public Safety in New York City by Scrutinize, QSIDE Institute, and NYU School of Law, May, 2023
    "The estimated impact of these judges' disproportionately carceral decisions over 2.5 years amounts to 580 additional people detained, 154 additional years of pretrial detention, and over $77 million of additional costs borne by New York City taxpayers."
  • Evidence Rules for Decarceration by Erin Collins, April, 2023
    "As we envision a path towards decarceration, we must consider the barriers created by evidence rules, even if defendants often are effectively dissuaded from exercising their right to trial and the rules are never applied."

Women

  • Women's Pathways Into and Out of Jail in Buncombe County by Vera Institute of Justice, November, 2022
    "Very high bond amounts present an insurmountable challenge, leaving women with no other option but pretrial incarceration. Many women with bond amounts less than $10,000 found this sum impossible to pay, even when required to post only 10 percent..."

Youth

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Punishment Beyond Prisons: Incarceration & Supervision by State

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When it comes to ranking U.S. states on the harshness of their criminal justice systems, incarceration rates only tell half of the story. 3.7 million people nationwide are on probation and parole, and several of the seemingly "less punitive" states put vast numbers of their residents under these other, deeply flawed forms of supervision.

In this recent report, we crunched the numbers to show how these programs too often serve as revolving doors bask to incarceration.

New data on HIV in prisons during the COVID-19 pandemic

While rates of HIV diagnoses in the U.S. have steadily declined for decades, people in prisons are still living with the virus at disproportionately high rates.

In this new briefing, we review data that examines the twin epidemics of HIV and mass incarceration in the time of COVID.

 

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Prison Policy Initiative
PO Box 127
Northampton, Mass. 01061

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