CJ 362

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Today the US now imprisons more people than any other country in the entire world. The US has approximately “1.8 million people behind bars: about 100,000 in federal custody, 1.1 million in state custody, and 600,000 in local jails.” ¹ The inmate population in America has grown so big that it is hard to even comprehend it. Think about the combined populations of some of the largest cities in the nation – Atlanta, Miami, ECT. – the inmate population exceeds that. Marc Mauer in his book The Race to Incarcerate says, "No other society in human history has ever imprisoned so many of its own citizens for the purpose of crime control… We have embarked on a great social experiment"
The drastic increase in US inmates has happened overtime. In the beginning of the century the incarceration rate did not rise much and was nearly 10 inmates for 100,000 people. By the mid-1970s, the rate steadily rose, doubled in the 1980s and tripled by the 1990s. Now we are at stifling rate of 445 people incarcerated for every 100,000 people in the nation; 1,100 per 100,000 males nationwide are incarcerated or have been at any given time.¹ (Statistics via: theatlantic.com). Thousands of new prisons and jails have been built over the last 20 years or so and, somehow, the prison system is still overcrowded. This leads to the concept of the prison system and corrections being termed an “industry.”
The great Plato had a lot to say on the subject of violence. Plato felt that: “We cannot mitigate the influence of media on the society. Some believe that it is the curse for the contemporary society, as it invigorates individuals to commit crimes”² Are these people right though? Is the media responsible for the increase in crime? Statistics speak otherwise and su...

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...on of a crime-punishment nexus to market forces shaping the contours of social control.”³ Capitalism reduces labor and swells the surplus population, which is then subjected to its state’s forms of coercion and social control. Also, the commercial features of the marked economy “enables private interests to commodify prisoners as raw materials for a corrections industry, creating a high-volume, profit-driven system of punishment.” ³
The reliance on the prison system as a primary means of social control or as a means of financial stability (increasing profits) shifts power away from a true democracy and gives too much power to the states and the corporate/industrialized world. The criminal justice system is almost like a powerful, overzealous, racist machine just waiting to take advantage of the impoverished citizens of the lower class – the blacks and Latinos.

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