Chris Uggen's Blog: mass incarceration in the joint economic committee

Thursday, October 04, 2007

mass incarceration in the joint economic committee

good on ya, bruce.

the u.s. senate's joint economic committee held a hearing this morning on "mass incarceration in the united states: at what cost?" "to explore the economic consequences and causes of and solutions to the steep increase of the u.s. prison population."

i hope some good comes from it. here's the press release:

The United States has 25 percent of the world’s prisoners, despite having only 5 percent of the world’s population. The JEC will examine why the United States has such a disproportionate share of the world’s prison population, as well as ways to address this issue that responsibly balance public safety and the high social and economic costs of imprisonment.

Expert witnesses have been asked to discuss the costs of maintaining a large prison system; the long-term labor market and social consequences of mass incarceration; whether the increase in the prison population correlates with decreases in crime; and what alternative sentencing strategies and post-prison re-entry programs have been most successful at reducing incarceration rates in states and local communities.

Witnesses (as of September 27):

Dr. Glenn Loury, Economics and Social Sciences Professor, Brown University
Dr. Bruce Western, Director Inequality and Social Policy Program, Harvard University
Alphonso Albert, Executive Director, Second Chances
Michael Jacobson, Executive Director, Vera Institute for Justice

3 Comments:

At 2:12 PM, Blogger Jay Livingston said...

Related stories:

2. The Mayor of San Francisco just came out against the war on drugs, and one of his objections was its inefficient use of incaraceration.

3. The government is claiming a victory on one front in the war on drugs: cocaine prices are up, supply is down. Of course, it has nothing to do with incarceration in the US and much to do with what's going on in Mexico.

 
At 4:17 PM, Blogger Mike said...

It is good to hear that some people are making the connection to incarceration and broad social impacts.

Being concerned about intergenerational effects, my fear is that prison populations may exponentially increase over time, even while punishment remains constant. I have not seen aggregate total costs of incarceration, but I sure it would be well the 2-3% of GDP currently spent by government on policing and corrections.

 
At 1:04 PM, Blogger christopher uggen said...

jay and mike, thanks. the costs are staggering, particularly when one considers the low bang-for-the-buck out at the tail ends of those long sentences.

 

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