Persuasive Essay On Prison Reform

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Over the past several decades, the number of prison inmates has grown exponentially. In 1980, prison population had numbers around half a million inmates. A graph of statistics gathered from the U.S. Bureau of Justice shows that between 1980 and 2010, the prison population grew almost five times, topping out at nearly 2.5 million. According to an article in The New York Times, the average time spent in jail by prisoners released in 2009 increased by 36% compared to prisoners released in 1990. Many people, such as those at Human Rights Watch, believe that the increase of these numbers has been because of tough-on-crime laws, causing prisons to be filled with non-violent offenders. This rise in crime rates, prison population, and recidivism, has led politicians as well as ordinary citizens to call for prison reform. However, many of the past ideas for prison reform have cost taxpayers more without producing better results, according to an article in The New York Times. Many of the reform ideas nowadays would still cost more, but some …show more content…

This reform idea was first introduced by New York Governor Andrew Cuomo. As an argument for his claim, Woodman shares statistics that show that having a college degree over a high school degree increases a person’s chances of getting hired by 50%. He asserts that if college education were offered to prison inmates, they would gain an edge in the job market, especially since top colleges and universities are not producing graduates for in-demand fields. “[T]hey’re not going to care that your degree is from University of Sing Sing, not University of Phoenix,” he states in relation to North Dakota’s need for engineers. Offering more job opportunities to ex-convicts would give them what Woodman calls an anchor in

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