http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/0818/p02s01-usju.html

More than 5.6 million Americans are in prison or have served time there,
according to a new report by the Justice Department released Sunday. That's
1 in 37 adults living in the United States, the highest incarceration level
in the world.
It's the first time the US government has released estimates of the extent
of imprisonment, and the report's statistics have broad implications for
everything from state fiscal crises to how other nations view the American
experience.



If current trends continue, it means that a black male in the United States
would have about a 1 in 3 chance of going to prison during his lifetime. For
a Hispanic male, it's 1 in 6; for a white male, 1 in 17.

The numbers come after many years of get-tough policies - and years when
violent-crime rates have generally fallen. But to some observers, they point
to broader failures in US society, particularly in regard to racial
minorities and others who are economically disadvantaged.

"These new numbers are shocking enough, but what we don't see are the ripple
effects of what they mean: For the generation of black children today,
there's almost an inevitable aspect of going to prison," says Marc Mauer,
assistant director of The Sentencing Project, a nonprofit advocacy group
based in Washington. "We have the wealthiest society in human history, and
we maintain the highest level of imprisonment. It's striking what that says
about our approach to social problems and inequality."

Numbering in the millions

Justice Department analysts say that experts in criminal justice have long
known of the stark disparities in prison experience, but they have never
been as fully documented. By the end of year 2001, some 1,319,000 adults
were confined in state or federal prisons. An estimated 4,299,000 former
prisoners are still alive, the new report concludes.

"What we are seeing is a substantial involvement of the public in the
criminal-justice system. It raises a lot of questions in the national
dialogue on everything from voting and sentencing to priorities related to
state's expenditures," says Allen Beck, chief of correction statistics at
the Bureau of Justice Statistics, who directed the report.

Nor does the impact of incarceration end with the sentence. Former inmates
can be excluded from receiving public assistance, living in public housing,
or receiving financial aid for college. Ex-felons are prohibited from voting
in many states. And with the increased use of background checks - especially
since 9/11 - they may be permanently locked out of jobs in many professions,
including education, child care, driving a bus, or working in a nursing
home.

Enfranchisement for ex-felons

More than 4 million prisoners or former prisoners are denied a right to
vote; in 12 states, that ban is for life.

"That's why racial profiling has become such a priority issue for
African-Americans, because it is the gateway to just such a statistic," says
Yvonne Scruggs- Leftwich, chief operating officer of the Black Leadership
Forum, in Washington. "It means that large numbers in the African-American
community are disenfranchised, sometimes permanently."

Some states are already scaling back prohibitions or limits on voting
affecting former inmates, including Maryland, Delaware, New Mexico, and
Texas.

In addition, critics say that efforts to purge voting rolls of former felons
could lead to abuses, and effectively disenfranchise many minority voters.

"On the day of the 2000 [presidential] election, there were an estimated
600,000 former felons who had completed their sentence yet because of
Florida's restrictive laws were unable to vote," says Mr. Mauer of the
Sentencing Project.

The new report also informs - but does not settle - one of the toughest
debates in American politics: whether high rates of imprisonment are related
to a drop in crime rates over the past decade.

The prison population has quadrupled since 1980. Much of that surge is the
result of public policy, such as the war on drugs and mandatory minimum
sentencing. Nearly 1 in 4 of the inmates in federal and state prisons are
there because of drug-related offenses, most of them nonviolent.

Narcotic-related arrests

New drug policies have especially affected incarceration rates for women,
which have increased at nearly double the rate for men since 1980. Nearly 1
in 3 women in prison today are serving sentences for drug-related crimes.

"A lot of people think that the reason crime rates have been dropping over
the past several years is, in part, because we're incarcerating the people
most likely to commit crimes," says Stephan Thernstrom, a historian at
Harvard University.

Others say the drop has more to do with factors such as a generally healthy
economy in the 1990s, more opportunity for urban youth, or better community
policing.

But no one disagrees that prison experience will be a part of the lives of
more and more Americans. By 2010, the number of American residents in prison
or with prison experience is expected to jump to 7.7 million, or 3.4 percent
of all adults, according to the new report.



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