We've added 28 reports on COVID, crime rates, probation, and more.

Criminal Justice Research Library for April 5, 2022 Bringing you the latest in empirical research about mass incarceration

We've added 28 new reports to the Research Library:

COVID-19

Crime and Crime Rates

  • Criminal Victimization, 2020 by Bureau of Justice Statistics, February, 2022
    "From 2016 to 2020, the percentage of persons who were victims of aggravated assault declined from 0.25% to 0.20%. The percentage who were victims of simple assault declined from 0.70% in 2016 to 0.61% in 2020."
  • Stalking Victimization, 2019 by Bureau of Justice Statistics, February, 2022
    "About 1.3% (3.4 million) of all persons age 16 or older were victims of stalking in 2019. Less than a third (29%) of all stalking victims reported the victimization to police in 2019."
  • California Crime Survivors Speak: A Statewide Survey of California Victims' Views on Safety and Justice by Californians for Safety and Justice, April, 2019
    "By a nearly a five to one margin, victims say that prison either makes it more likely someone will commit crimes or has no public safety impact at all. Only a small percentage believe that prisons help rehabilitate people."

Death Penalty

  • Capital Punishment, 2020 by Bureau of Justice Statistics, December, 2021
    "Prisoners under sentence of death on December 31, 2020 had been on death row for an average of 19.4 years."

Drug Policy

General

  • Mass Incarceration: The Whole Pie 2022 by Prison Policy Initiative, March, 2022
    "This big-picture view is a lens through which the main drivers of mass incarceration come into focus; it allows us to identify important, but often ignored, systems of confinement."
  • Profle of Prison Inmates, 2016 by Bureau of Justice Statistics, December, 2021
    "Prisoners held in state prison in 2016 were older than those held in state prison in 2004. Te average age of state prisoners was 39 in 2016, compared to 35 in 2004."

Health impact

Incarceration Rates Growth Causes

  • People in Prison in Winter 2021-22 by Vera Institute of Justice, February, 2022
    "All states and the federal prison system reduced their prison populations in 2020, but 19 states and the federal government increased the number of people incarcerated in prisons in 2021."
  • Prisoners in 2020 by Bureau of Justice Statistics, December, 2021
    "The prison populations of California, Texas, and the Federal Bureau of Prisons each declined by more than 22,500 from 2019 to 2020, accounting for 33% of the total prison population decrease."

Jails

  • Jail Inmates in 2020 by Bureau of Justice Statistics, December, 2021
    "The number of inmates in local jails across the United States decreased 25% from midyear 2019 (734,500) to midyear 2020 (549,100), after a 10-year period of relative stability."

Probation and parole

  • Correctional Populations in the United States, 2020 by Bureau of Justice Statistics, March, 2022
    "The decline in the correctional population during 2020 was due to decreases in both the community supervision population (down 276,700 or 6.6%) and the incarcerated population (down 294,400 or 18.9%)."
  • Probation and Parole in the United States, 2020 by Bureau of Justice Statistics, December, 2021
    "The adult probation population declined 8.3% during 2020, the largest annual decrease since 1980 when BJS began the probation collection."

Recidivism and Reentry

Trials

Youth

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Mass Incarceration: The Whole Pie 2022

pie chart

A lot has changed since the start of the pandemic. One thing has not: The U.S. still locks up far too many people in prison and jail.

In the newest edition of Mass Incarceration: The Whole Pie, we look at how COVID has impacted mass incarceration, and offer a glimpse at what comes next.

 

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Prison Policy Initiative
PO Box 127
Northampton, Mass. 01061

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