Critical Issues In Criminal Justice Flashcards
America’s Prison Exceptionalism:
1) Number of prisoners (2.3 million in state, fed, jail).
2) Recidivism rates
3) Who is in prison and why are they there
Between 1987 and 2007, the nation’s prison system population tripled, growing 1 million
The US accounts for 4.2% of the world’s population but accounts for 23% of the world’s prisoners
World leader in incarceration rates:
US 700 per 100,000
Most Western European countries: less than 100 per 100,000
Japan 40 per 100,000
How we hinder after prison:
Felony records follow you FOREVER
Permanently excluded from welfare and Section 8 housing
Exclusion from voting, some states it is permanent
Texas is one of 18 states that allow inmates to vote immediately after completion of incarceration, supervised probation, supervised parole
Sex offender notification system
Very broad in many states
(look at offender maps)
Exclusion from many types of employment
6 states permanently ban felons from running for public employment even the most menial jobs
Nurses, barbers, beauticians
How we help after prison (specific ways and examples):
Drug courts,
Reentry programs (Wynne Unit Huntsville has a box factory, a computer recovery factory,[2] and a license plate factory[2] (the only one for the state and works with the 3M company)
AND
San Quentin prison, bay area, CA- The last mile program teaches inmates how to code and navigate tech industry
Private companies (Daves Bread, Greystone Bakery),
Non-profit organizations
Biggest obstacle ex-offenders face
Housing and employment
Change from indeterminate to determinate sentencing and the effect it had on prison population and numbering of returning inmates
Shift from indeterminate sentencing to determinant sentencing in the 1970s
(give details of indeterminate and determinate)
Intermediate sanctions and alternatives to incarceration, successful?
Probation and parole have been the most important programs for more than one hundred years. During this time, a variety of different approaches have been attempted to enhance their effectiveness, including intensive supervision, boot camps, curfews, mandatory drug testing, and other restrictions.
. Million of adults in the U.S. are incarcerated, on probation or on parole (1 in 61 adults)
5.5
Intermediate sanctions and alternatives to incarceration, successful?
The Rand study of felons on probation in California is arguably the best dataavailable. The findings are depressin
Victim rights, victims rights movement and how that has evolved and its effect on prisoner reentry issues
(talk)
What can we do to lower recidivism rates and improve outcomes?
4 Major areas that need to be reformed
Housing
Employment
Education
Drugs
Mental health
Legalization
A general policy orientation that involves the lifting of all criminal and civil proscriptions and sanctions
The most liberal and radical of all options
There are variations on how to legalize drugs. Most popular variety is making drugs (mostly marijuana) similar to that of cigarettes and alcohol, adults only.
Open and free drug markets too.
Decriminalization:
Similar to legalization, but with unique features
Is not simply a “compromise” between legalization and prohibition
Policy that removes criminal sanctions for small amounts of marijuana or other charges
Nevertheless, growing or possessing marijuana is not legal — it is simply a civil offense rather than a criminal offense
Currently, 12 states have some form of decriminalization legislation
Harm reduction
Harm reduction is a general policy orientation that shifts focus away from legal status of drugs to policies and practices that would reduce harm caused by drugs and drug policy
Based on the following premise:
1)Drug use will never totally be eliminated
2)Drug policies are sometimes more damaging than drug use
3) Risks of drug use should be weighed against risks posed by drug policies
4) Help prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS, other diseases associated with drug addiction
5) Similar to medicalization
The decline from the war on crime:
de-emphasized crack cocaine, better policing, more incarceration, legalization of Roe v Wade, CHANGE IN POLICY
What is the War on Drugs goals?
2000 educate and enable america’s youth to reject illegal drug as well as alchohol and tobacco
Increase safety of america’s citizens by substantial…..