POLICY

Policy Making

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Progression of Mass Incarceration in the United States

Whether known as mass incarceration, hyper incarceration, mass imprisonment, or the prison boom, this term denotes the new American experiment in incarceration. It is well-defined by historically and comparatively high rates of imprisonment among young, African American men residing in localities of extreme disadvantage. Even if there is scholarly accord about how to delimit mass incarceration, there is a certain level of discrepancy over its consequences and causes (Gonzalez, 2020). A number of individuals say it incapacitates and deters; others state that it depreciates deprived families, making them socially downgraded. Whereas others have improved a functionalist argument as to the bases of mass imprisonment, proposing that it is the fourth strange tradition for the control of African Americans—after Jim Crow, slavery, and the ghetto. Other individuals have argued that an amalgamation of political realignments, cultural shifts, changes in occupation predictions for low-skilled men, and possibly most significantly, legal amendments have driven the histrionic upsurge and complete difference in rates of incarceration over the late 20th and early 21st centuries.

In addition to personal wellbeing, mass incarceration has a great impact on the African American and Latino communities’ wellbeing and health. Individuals leaving prison and jail normally go back to communities characterized by limited access to primary care and poor wellbeing consequences. The more personalities that are being incarcerated, the greater the redundancy rate is. As a result, the United States economy drops in between $57 billion and $65 billion in productivity yearly (Sykes & Bailey, 2020). For ex-prisoners, it is very hard to re-enter the workforce. The toll that mass incarceration takes on societies is immense. Youngsters losing one or more guardian or parent to incarceration can make a child up for a life of destructive mental health issues and poverty. In addition, societies that suffer from a great rate of mass incarceration normally are affected by zero-tolerance strategies in schools. Therefore, progenies usually go through their first arrest in their early juvenile years. This signifies that they rapidly get themselves on a pathway of recurring incarceration. One of the greatest distressing pieces of the mass incarceration account is the repetitive injustices that prisoners get themselves faced with.

Mass incarceration is devastatingly a policy result of the castigatory governmental rhetoric. George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and countless other black individuals of the United States cases were ultimately unsuccessful in winning the broader public policy debate. As the times go down on a summer of ethnic reckoning in the U.S., the debate over police racial injustice and brutality shows no indications of cooling down (Gonzalez, 2020). They’re among the sequence of high-profile occurrences of violence against Black individuals nearly all by police, altogether but one deadly – that have provoked extensive demonstrations and a nationwide debate about systemic racism. The United States has one of the top rates of incarceration in the universe. With 645 prisoners per 100,000 of inhabitants, the United States is by far the head among large developed countries in incarceration. The social inequality brought by mass incarceration is substantial and continuing for three main reasons: it is cumulative, it is invisible, and it is intergenerational. The disparity is invisible in the logic that long-standing populations generally lay outside the official versions of financial welfare. Police practices, Mandatory minimum sentencing, and harsher laws have added to the increase of the mass incarceration.

Reference

Gonzalez, C. Mass Incarceration in the United States. The Sociological Eye 2018, 5.

Sykes, B. L., & Bailey, A. K. (2020). Institutional Castling: Military Enlistment and Mass Incarceration in the United States. RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 6(1), 30-54.

https://doi.org/10.7758/RSF.2020.6.1.02