Research and data for criminal justice reform

Criminal Justice Research Library for July 15, 2021 Bringing you the latest in empirical research about mass incarceration

We've added 26 new reports to the Research Library:

Community Impact

Conditions of Confinement

  • Louisiana Deaths Behind Bars: 2015 - 2019 by Incarceration Transparency, June, 2021
    "Prisons and jails should ideally have lower death rates than the general public due to the physical proximity of medical care behind bars, 24-hour staffing and supervision, and reduced probability of certain types of deaths, such as car accidents..."
  • New data: State prisons are increasingly deadly places by Prison Policy Initiative, June, 2021
    "New data from the Bureau of Justice Statistics shows that state prisons are seeing alarming rises in suicide, homicide, and drug and alcohol-related deaths."

Economics of Incarceration

  • The People's Plan for Prison Closure by Californians United for a Responsible Budget (CURB), April, 2021
    "Accomplishing our goal of closing ten prisons in five years will be hard. It will require political courage. But history is watching us..."

Families

General

  • Prison Population Trends 2020 by Massachusetts Department of Correction, May, 2021
    "The MA DOC jurisdiction population's historic decline since 2012 (n=11,723) continued through to January 1st, 2021 (n=6,848)."

Health impact

Jails

Police and Policing

Privatization

  • No Kickbacks by Parole Illinois, June, 2021
    "Through its "surcharges", "kickbacks", and denial of basic necessities, the IDOC is effectively siphoning millions of dollars from largely low income communities by preying on people's love for their incarcerated friend or family member."

Recidivism and Reentry

  • A New Lease on Life by Sentencing Project, June, 2021
    "People convicted of homicide and other crimes of violence rarely commit new crimes of violence after release from long-term imprisonment."

Sentencing Policy and Practices

  • Annual Report 2020 by Sentencing Project, May, 2021
    "The Sentencing Project continues to push for decarceration and vaccinations to save lives and help bring safety and humanity to the nation's overcrowded, inhumane, and unsafe places of detention."
  • The Declining Significance of Race in Criminal Sentencing: Evidence from US Federal CourtsPaywall :( by Michael T Light, March, 2021
    "Sentences [for white and Black people] became more equal almost entirely due to changes in observable case characteristics and not due to changes in the treatment of offenders."

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People with incarcerated loved ones have shorter life expectancies and poorer health

The negative health consequences of mass incarceration aren’t just felt by people behind bars. It is a burden also carried by the estimated 45% of people have an immediate family member who has been incarcerated.

Our latest briefing makes clear, drastically reducing the number of people we lock up behind bars is imperative to public health.

 

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Prison Policy Initiative
PO Box 127
Northampton, Mass. 01061

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