Mandatory Sentencing Essay

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In light of these violent crimes rising it is easy to resort to a “knee jerk” reaction and return to longer sentences but we must realize the effects it has on all the parties involved. Looking at the 1960s and 1970s when Prison administrators used previous ideologies to fit political agendas, such as expecting incarceration to be extended by conservative parole boards. Over time, incarceration has been the means to punish individuals with the mentality of “do the crime, you do the time” but one must consider the burdens it puts on the prisons. Certain programs such as work release, study release and even furloughs for shot programs for specific purposes, programs that are responsible to prepare inmates to reintegrate to society when their eventual release arrives, were eliminated with the introduction of Mandatory Sentencing. Thus, in turn we now have Overcrowding, lack of funding for prisons and created issues in how to best manage prisons due to inmates serving their full sentences. This style of prison reform was directly responsible for the prison population to rise dramatically during the …show more content…

Whilst we are still dealing with the ramifications of these mandatory sentences, it is understood that if we keep criminals in prison, they will not be able to victimize the community; they also deserve to be rehabilitated and helped to be integrated in society, something that collective incarceration does not do. Collective incarceration focused on the fact that the longer the sentence, especially for career criminals, it would lessen crime rates and prison populations because it would deter other criminals from committing deviant acts. Also supporting this notion was the fact that all individuals with the same prior records would receive the same mandatory

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