38 new reports on policing, pretrial detention, and more.

Criminal Justice Research Library for December 29, 2022 Bringing you the latest in empirical research about mass incarceration

We've added 38 new reports to the Research Library:

COVID-19

Conditions of Confinement

Crime and Crime Rates

Disability

Education

Families

Felon Disenfranchisement

  • Jail-based polling locations: A way to fight voter disenfranchisement by Prison Policy Initiative, October, 2022
    "In the June 2022 primary, roughly 25% of people detained at the [Cook County, Ill.] jail cast their ballots. This location was so successful that people at the jail actually voted at a higher rate than registered voters in Chicago (20%)."

General

  • Winnable criminal justice reforms in 2023 by Prison Policy Initiative, November, 2022
    "This list offers policymakers and advocates straightforward solutions that would have the greatest impacts on reducing incarceration and ameliorating harms experienced by those with a conviction history, without further investments in the carceral system."

Health impact

  • Mortality in a Multi-State Cohort of Former State Prisoners, 2010-2015 by U.S. Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies, February, 2022
    "We found that non-Hispanic white former prisoners were more likely to die within five years after prison release and more likely to die in the initial weeks after release compared to racial minorities and Hispanics."

LGBT

Mental Health

Police and Policing

  • Traffic Safety by Center for Policing Equity, September, 2022
    "Racially biased enforcement sets into motion a cascade of interrelated harms for millions of people: unaffordable fines and fees, mounting debt, driver's license suspensions, lost employment, unnecessary arrests, and even injury or death."

Poverty and wealth

Pretrial Detention

Privatization

Probation and parole

Race and ethnicity

Recidivism and Reentry

Sentencing Policy and Practices

Trials

  • Justice Delayed: The Complex System of Delays in Criminal Court by Kat Albrecht et al., July, 2022
    "This Article demonstrates not only that case delay is a significant social and legal problem, but also that the leadership of the Circuit Court...[must rethink] the way in which Cook Count's criminal courts conduct business."

Youth

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State of Phone Justice 2022: The problem, the progress, and what's next

phone

At a time when the cost of a typical phone call is approaching zero, why are incarcerated people and their families charged so much?

In this new report we look at data from all 50 states and more than 3,000 jails to understand how much families pay and how companies are finding new ways to price-gouge them through an expanding array of non-phone products.

Webinar: Fighting Jail Expansion

Across the country, communities are fighting against plans to expand the carceral system by building new jails. On January 10th at noon EST, we're hosting a webinar that will bring together activists that have led these efforts to share the strategies they employed and highlight resources that are available to others leading similar campaigns.

Register to attend the webinar here.

11 of our most important reports, briefings, and tools in 2022

Didn’t catch everything we published in 2022? We’ve curated a list of some of our best work from this year.

From a deep dive into bail companies to new tools for advocates, in this blog post we highlight some of our most impactful work in 2022.

 

Our other newsletters

  • General Prison Policy Initiative newsletter (archives)
  • Ending prison gerrymandering (archives)

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Prison Policy Initiative
PO Box 127
Northampton, Mass. 01061

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