We've added 25 new reports on COVID, drug policy, crime rates, and more.

Criminal Justice Research Library for May 11, 2022 Bringing you the latest in empirical research about mass incarceration

We've added 25 new reports to the Research Library:

COVID-19

  • Three State Prison Oversight During the COVID-19 Pandemic by Pennsylvania Prison Society, John Howard Association, and Correctional Association of New York, April, 2022
    "[We] provide data unavailable in states lacking similar independent oversight, and it tells a story of very different responses to comparable challenges, and a lack of transparency on the details of the crisis and policies developed in response."

Conditions of Confinement

Crime and Crime Rates

Drug Policy

General

Health impact

Jails

LGBT

Police and Policing

Poverty and wealth

  • Beyond the count: A deep dive into state prison populations by Prison Policy Initiative, April, 2022
    "Incarcerated people are a diverse cross-section of society whose disadvantages and unmet needs often begin early in life, and persist throughout their often lifelong involvement with the criminal legal system."

Pretrial Detention

  • The Hidden Costs of Pretrial Detention Revisited by Christopher Lowenkamp, March, 2022
    "There is no observable "deterrent effect" of pretrial detention, and in fact there is a consistent "criminogenic effect" of pretrial detention on rearrest." This report follows up on Lowenkamp's 2013 report, The Hidden Costs of Pretrial Detention, which also examined jail admissions in Kentucky.

Probation and parole

Recidivism and Reentry

Sentencing Policy and Practices

  • Felony Murder: An On-Ramp for Extreme Sentencing by Sentencing Project, March, 2022
    "[Felony murder laws] violate the principle of proportional sentencing, which is supposed to punish crimes based on their severity. This report evaluates the legal and empirical foundation, and failings, of the felony murder rule."

Youth

Using research to make change

We go beyond our original reports and analyses by curating a database of virtually all the empirical criminal justice research available online. If this resource is helpful in your work, will you consider giving back today? Thank you for making this work possible.

Beyond the count: A deep dive into state prison populations

Report cover

The walls and restrictions that keep incarcerated people out of public life also keep them out of the public eye: most of what we know about them comes from the prison system itself.

But our recent report looks at a unique, large-scale survey of incarcerated people that provides a richer picture of just who is locked up in state prisons.

Executive inaction: States and the federal government fail to use commutations as a release mechanism

report cover

President Biden made news last month when he commuted the federal sentences of 75 people. That's an achievement by today's standards. By historical standards, it's dismal.

In this recent report, we looked at state and federal commutation data and found this tool, which is enshrined in the Constituion, is woefully underused.

 

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