From Prison Policy Initiative <[email protected]>
Subject Our most important research and advocacy work in 2025
Date December 11, 2025 3:25 PM
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Deep dives into deportations, healthcare, prison discipline, and more.

Prison Policy Initiative updates for December 11, 2025 Exposing how mass incarceration harms communities and our national welfare

Our most important research and advocacy work in 2025 [[link removed]]

by Danielle Squillante [[link removed]]

Highlights of our work include exposing the role jails are playing in Trump’s mass deportation agenda, a new report detailing the current state of youth confinement, and a deep dive into discretionary parole systems.

2025 was a challenging year. Not only were many states returning to the failed policies that created the nation’s mass incarceration crisis, but a new administration came to D.C., threatening to use the power of the federal government to make the criminal legal system even worse. The Prison Policy Initiative rose to these challenges, pushing back on and exposing these misguided policies, and continuing to produce cutting-edge research that shines a light on the dark corners of the criminal legal system in America.

Here’s just a taste of some of our most important work this year:

Updates to our bedrock Whole Pie reports

We released the 2025 edition of our flagship report, Mass Incarceration: The Whole Pie [[link removed]]. The report offers the most comprehensive view of the nearly 2 million people incarcerated in the U.S., showing what types of facilities they are in and why. It also included, for the first time, a section that breaks down which states are driving the growth in incarceration. We also released an update to our Youth Confinement: The Whole Pie [[link removed]] report, which provides the most up-to-date picture of how many youth are detained and committed in the U.S., highlighting the persistent overincarceration of Black and Indigenous youth in a system that, in recent decades, has made great strides in reducing youth confinement overall.

New resources highlighting how the federal government is impacting the criminal legal system

Since taking office, the Trump administration has issued numerous executive orders and used its bully pulpit and control over federal spending to coerce state and local governments into expanding the size and brutality of their criminal legal systems. To help people make sense of these rapid-fire actions, we released a new tool [[link removed]] that tracks the administration’s efforts and connects the dots on its strategy to make the criminal legal system harsher, less effective, and even more unfair. We also released a primer [[link removed]] on the traditional role of the federal government in shaping the criminal legal system, to help advocates know where state and local lawmakers can push back on the administration’s actions.

Hiding in Plain Sight: How local jails obscure and facilitate mass deportation under Trump [[link removed]]

Local jails, even in some sanctuary cities and states, are playing an essential role in President Trump’s mass detention and deportation plan. This report [[link removed]] breaks down the complicated overlap between local criminal and immigration systems, and reveals that the Trump administration is circumventing sanctuary policies by referring immigrants to the shadowy U.S. Marshals Service, whose contracts with jails to hold pretrial detainees have often gone overlooked.

Highlights from our advocacy work

While we’re best known for our research and reports, that’s not all we do. In 2025, our advocacy department [[link removed]] partnered with dozens of organizations in over 25 states to provide custom research and strategy support to on-the-ground efforts that are transforming our criminal legal system. This year, we testified in legislatures in Massachusetts and Colorado [[link removed]] on the importance of protecting in-person visitation in prisons and jails and presented to the Hawai’i [[link removed]] Correctional Oversight Commission about the pitfalls of new jail construction. We also presented two webinars, each with hundreds of attendees, that covered how best to interpret recidivism data [[link removed]] and how to fight unnecessary local jail construction [[link removed]].

Parole in Perspective: A deep dive into discretionary parole systems [[link removed]]

This two-part report [[link removed]] pulls back the curtain on parole release systems, providing the most accessible and comprehensive source to date for comparing how these essential — and often dysfunctional — release mechanisms are set up in 35 states. The first part [[link removed]] explores the makeup of boards and how they conduct hearings. The second [[link removed]] dives into new data on hearings and grants, and the factors that boards consider — including their discretion — in determining whether someone will be released.

Bad Behavior: How prison disciplinary policies manufacture misconduct [[link removed]]

Every prison system has a lengthy disciplinary policy laying out the rules incarcerated people must follow, as well as the procedures and punishments they’ll face if they don’t. These policies are supposed to ensure safety, security, and order by deterring and punishing misconduct. In practice, however, prison discipline is a system of petty tyranny with devastating, long-term consequences. Our report, Bad Behavior [[link removed]] is the broadest review of disciplinary policies to date, and draws on original research as well as testimony from 47 currently incarcerated people, providing an essential look at how prisons are run in the age of mass incarceration.

Cut-rate care: The systemic problems shaping ‘healthcare’ behind bars [[link removed]]

In correctional healthcare systems, care is secondary to controlling costs and avoiding lawsuits. For this report [[link removed]], we pored over research, news investigations, government reports, and contractor documents to better understand the “big picture” relationship between healthcare providers, government agencies, and incarcerated people, and to identify system-level targets for improving care outcomes. Importantly, we combined testimonies from incarcerated people in state and federal prisons with this in-depth research and analysis to tell a fuller story of how deeply flawed health care systems are.

States of Women’s Incarceration: The Global Context 2025 [[link removed]]

This report [[link removed]] offers a crucial lens through which to view the criminalization of women, who are a small minority of all incarcerated people in the U.S., but whose incarceration rates today are at near-historic highs. It provides a comprehensive women’s incarceration rate for every U.S. state — including prisons and jails, youth confinement facilities, tribal jails, immigrant detention centers, and other types of incarceration — comparing states to each other and to countries of the world.

New national data help fill 20-year data gap: Offense data for people in local jails [[link removed]]

Millions of people are arrested and booked into jail every year, but existing national data offer very little information about the actual criminal charges for which they are detained. In this briefing [[link removed]], we worked with the Jail Data Initiative [[link removed]] to fill that gap and provide a new “snapshot” of people in jail by offense type using the most up-to-date nationally representative sample available.

Fourteen states ripe for prison gerrymandering reform [[link removed]]

Everyone is supposed to have an equal voice in their government’s decisions, but an outdated and misguided Census Bureau policy that counts incarcerated people in the wrong place gives a few residents of each state a megaphone. It is a problem known as prison gerrymandering, and state lawmakers can fix it. We recently released a series of reports focused on states ripe for ending prison gerrymandering — Alaska [[link removed]], Florida [[link removed]], Georgia [[link removed]], Kansas [[link removed]], Kentucky [[link removed]], Louisiana [[link removed]], Michigan [[link removed]], North Carolina [[link removed]], Oklahoma [[link removed]], Oregon [[link removed]], Texas [[link removed]], Vermont [[link removed]], West Virginia [[link removed]], and Wyoming [[link removed]]. Not only do these states have significantly prison-gerrymandered districts, but this problem has a significant impact on their Black, Native American, or Latino residents.

This is only a small piece of the important and impactful work we published in 2025, and our work is far from over. We’ve got big things planned in 2026, when we’ll continue to expose the broader harms of mass criminalization and highlight solutions that keep our communities safe without expanding the footprint of the carceral system.

***

What do you think? Was there a Prison Policy Initiative report [[link removed]] or briefing [[link removed]] that you thought was particularly powerful that didn't make the list? Is there a topic you want us to cover in 2026? Reply to this email to let us know about it.

Help us continue this work in 2026 [[link removed]]

If you find our work valuable, we hope you'll consider making a contribution [[link removed]] as part of your end-of-year giving. Our work is only possible thanks to the contributions from people like you, who are committed to ending mass incarceration in America.

We can accept tax-deductible gifts online [[link removed]] or via paper checks sent to PO Box 127 Northampton MA 01061. Thank you!

Other news: What Trump gets right and wrong about pardons [[link removed]]

Donald Trump has garnered lots of headlines for the pardons that he's granted.

In this new piece [[link removed]], we take a closer look at these pardons to understand what Trump gets right, what he gets wrong, and what others can learn from his actions.

Can you support our work? [[link removed]]

This work is only possible thanks to the generosity of people like you, who are committed to ending mass incarceration in America.

As you plan your end-of-year giving, can you help us keep going by making a contribution today [[link removed]]? We can accept tax-deductible gifts online [[link removed]] or via paper checks sent to PO Box 127 Northampton MA 01061. Thank you!

Donate today [[link removed]]

Please support our work [[link removed]]

Our work is made possible by private donations. Can you help us keep going? We can accept tax-deductible gifts online [[link removed]] or via paper checks sent to PO Box 127 Northampton MA 01061. Thank you!

Our other newsletters Ending prison gerrymandering ( archives [[link removed]]) Criminal justice research library ( archives [[link removed]])

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