US prison numbers reach record high
US prison numbers reach record high. Al Jazeera. 2/29/2008.
More than one per cent of US adults are serving prison sentences, higher than any other country in the world, according to a new report.
More than one per cent of US adults are serving prison sentences, higher than any other country in the world, according to a new report.
The US penal system held more than 2.3 million adults at the start of the year, the Pew Centre on the States said on Thursday.
More populous China was ranked second with 1.5 million behind bars, while Russia was third with 890,000.
"Beyond the sheer
number of inmates, America also is the global leader in the rate at
which it incarcerates its citizenry, outpacing nations like South
Africa and Iran," the report said.
The report said
growth in prison numbers had not been driven by a similar increase in
crime rates or a corresponding increase in the nation's population.
"Rather, it flows
principally from a wave of policy choices that are sending more
lawbreakers to prison and, through the popular 'three-strikes' measures
and other sentencing enhancements, keeping them there longer," it said.
Correction expenditure
US states spent more than $44bn on corrections last year, the report said, compared with $10.6bn in 1987.
Ryan King of the
Sentencing Project, a US prison reform group, told Al Jazeera that many
of those currently incarcerated were serving sentences for minor
offences or were drug users.
"We are using tens
of billions of dollars of our domestic resources to incarcerate
individuals who would be much better off either under community
supervision or in a public health treatment programme."
The report said that the national prison population had almost tripled between 1987 and 2007.
While one in 106 adult white men are incarcerated, one in 36 Hispanics and one in 15 African-Americans are behind bars.
Young black men
Younger black men fare even worse, with one in nine African-Americans ages 20 to 34 held behind bars.
King said this was
the case because US law-enforcement agencies chose to enforce drug laws
more strictly among African-Americans.
"African-Americans are more likely to be arrested because law enforcement is centred in those communities."
While men are still
10 times more likely to be incarcerated than women, the female penal
population is "burgeoning at a far brisker pace", the study said.
Some states, such
as Texas and Kansas, had slowed their prison population growth, with
more use of community supervision for lower-risk offenders and use of
sentences other prison.
