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We've The Prison Policy Initiative has added 23 new reports to the Research Library:
- "We're Hungry in Here": D.C. Department of Corrections Food Survey Results by dcgreens, December, 2023
"Six in ten residents responded that they "rarely" or "never" eat breakfast,
seven in ten "rarely" or "never" eat lunch (most commonly bologna
sandwiches) and six in ten respondents reported "rarely" or "never" eating
dinner."
- The High Costs of Cheap Food: Eating in West Virginia Prisons by West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy, September, 2023
"According to the Department of Agriculture, as of August 9, 2023, the
Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation (DCR) has failed to submit any
documentation required by the Fresh Food Act since 2019."
- No Justice, No Resilience: Prison Abolition As Disaster Mitigation in an Era of Climate ChangePaywall :( by Carlee Purdum et al, December, 2021
"Incarceration undermines individual and collective resilience needed to
recover from disasters, whereas carceral infrastructure facilitates
disaster harm to incarcerated persons and their communities."
- Understanding the Landscape of Fines, Restitution, and Fees for Criminal Convictions in Minnesota by Robina Institute of Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, August, 2023
"In 2023, the [Minnesota] DOC reported that of 10,413 correctional fees
imposed, it waived 338, for a waiver rate of 3.8%. However, of these,
nearly 40% were waived due to the death of the person upon which the fees
were originally imposed."
- "You Send Yourselves to Jail": Coercive Diversion in the Allegheny County Mental Health Court by Abolitionist Law Center, December, 2023
"As a plea-dependent court, [the mental health court] subjects people to
most traditional carceral processes and leaves them with a permanent
record."
- Examining the System-Wide Effect of Eliminating Bail in New York City: A Controlled-Interrupted Time Series Study by Data Collaborative for Justice, October, 2023
"We found that eliminating discretion to set bail for select charges, mostly
misdemeanors and non-violent felonies, was not associated with a
system-wide change in either two-year or pretrial recidivism in either
direction."
- Report and Recommendations Concerning Access to Counsel at the Federal Bureau of Prisons' Pretrial Facilities by Advisory Group of Dept. of Justice Components, July, 2023
"Unpredictability and delays in visits can complicate the attorney-client
relationship and discourage individuals detained pretrial from seeking
in-person visits with their counsel."
- One Size Doesn't Fit All: A Review of Post-Plea Problem-Solving Courts in Cook County by Chicago Appleseed Center for Fair Courts & Chicago Council of Lawyers, March, 2023
"Court personnel reported many success stories in their courts...[but]
several of these programs are unlikely to meet all of Public Act 102-1041's
stated goals."
- Parole Condition Setting in Iowa by Robina Institute of Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, July, 2023
"There is a perception...that there are very few standard conditions because
they fall into just eight paragraphs. But when...parsed into individual
conditions, there are thirty-five distinct requirements."
- Probation Condition Setting in Johnson County, Kansas by Robina Institute of Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, July, 2023
"The standard probation forms used in Johnson County, Kansas, do not mirror
the requirements in statute, and people across the system have lost sight
of which conditions are required by statute and which are not."
- Parole Rules in the United States: Conditions of Parole in Historical Perspective, 1956-2020 by Benjamin Wiggins et al, June, 2021
"The increasing number of standard conditions for people on parole,
especially economic sanctions, can overwhelm a person on parole's
willingness and capacity to comply."
- Gideon at 60: A Snapshot of State Public Defense Systems and Paths to System Reform by National Institute of Justice Office for Access to Justice, November, 2023
"Two-thirds of states (34) do not have full statewide oversight of public
defense, meaning they do not set standards or monitor whether people
receive counsel in all cases where they have a right to it."
- The Failure of Gideon and the Promise of Public Defense by Center for Justice Innovation, November, 2023
"In essence, fast pleas, typically at the expense of what is best for [a
flat-fee attorney's] client, act as the counter to offset low pay."
- Advancing the Use of Data in Prosecution: What We Measure Matters by Fair and Just Prosecution, October, 2023
"Although a great deal of progress has been made to center data and research
in public discourse, few jurisdictions have chosen to devote sufficient
resources to cultivate robust data capacity in prosecutors' offices."
- Systemic Failure To Appear in Court by Lindsay Graef, Sandra G. Mason, Aurelie Ouss, and Megan T. Stevenson, August, 2023
"Between 2010 and 2020, an essential witness or lawyer failed to appear for
at least one hearing in 53% of all cases, compared to a 19% FTA rate for
defendants [in Philadelphia, Pa.]."
- Understanding Court Absence and Reframing "Failure To Appear" in Lake County, IL by Justice System Partners, May, 2023
"90% of individuals were not aware of either the Public Defender or Pretrial
Services court reminder notification system. Of those who were not aware of
this system, 90% said they would opt-in if offered again."
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Other news:
Our work is made possible by private donations. Can you help us keep going? We can accept tax-deductible gifts online or via paper checks sent to PO Box 127 Northampton MA 01061. Thank you!
You are receiving this message because you signed up on our website or you met Peter Wagner or another staff member at an event and asked to be included.
Prison Policy Initiative
PO Box 127
Northampton, Mass. 01061
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