Effects Of Incarceration

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Incarceration Numerous studies focusing on the criminal justice system reveal that the levels of crime in the United States have been steadily decreasing over the last several decades. Regardless of this information the number of racial and ethnic minorities currently incarcerated has reached record highs. The implementation of strategies designed to lessen the burdensome levels of criminal activity appear on the surface to be successful. Community oriented policing, sentencing reforms and a renewed focus on flawed criminal practices are the impetus for the discussion of incarceration practices. According to the article, 2.2 million people remain in the custody of the criminal justice system, with over twice that figure under the supervision …show more content…

The current trend reveals that 9.9% of young black males and 3.9% of young Hispanic males were incarcerated by the end of 2015. At the peak of incarceration levels in 2010, 33% of young black male dropouts found themselves incarcerated in our nation’s jails. The trend also reveals that a child’s parental exposure to incarceration increases both risk factors and the chances that the child will be the subject of criminal justice contact. The article further states that the racial and ethnic concentration of incarceration does not reflect the trends shown by the crime and victimization studies. It is instead a product of “policing, prosecution, and sentencing” which focuses on “historically disadvantaged groups”. This perpetuates itself on an intergenerational level due to the economic and social impact on members of the group due to the internalized and externalized behaviors. …show more content…

With a background in applied criminology, I have a firm belief that the big picture is much larger than what is often presented. According to the paper, even as crime rates continue to decline, the number of incarcerated African-American and Hispanic males continues to rise. On its face as a stand-alone fact, this presents an appalling statistic, but real information that we as sociologist must flesh out are the underlying reasons. As the author has in the article, one could easily take the stance that it is the “shift in policing, prosecution and sentencing”. However, this leaves the unsupported questions of how and why this regression

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