Chapter 14 The Future of Corrections. Collateral Effects of Imprisonment Politics of Corrections and the Media The War on Drugs The Costs of Current Policies.

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Presentation transcript:

Chapter 14 The Future of Corrections

Collateral Effects of Imprisonment Politics of Corrections and the Media The War on Drugs The Costs of Current Policies Changes in the Justice System New Technologies New Models of the Correctional Mission

Collateral Costs of Imprisonment 400% increase in imprisonment since 1980 Harm to families and communities Disenfranchisement Risk of disease Crime and prison rates largely unrelated –25% decline in violent crime Increasing recidivism and severity of crime

Media Agenda Setting: Directs concern to particular issues, opinions on topic set by personal factors Also creates images that are widely accepted Corrections issues manipulated for political and monetary gains by politicians, victims’ groups, CO unions, and prison-industrial complex Simple, dramatic, unusual stories preferred Correctional successes avoid publicity

Media (continued) , homicide rates dropped 50% but media news coverage increased 400% Reporters poorly informed about corrections Correctional officials reluctant to deal with media, give impression of secrecy

War on Drugs Alcohol the most criminogenic drug 453,000 imprisoned for drugs at annual cost of $5 billion 58% have no violent history One in three female inmates is a drug offender Disproportionate minority confinement largely due to severe drug penalties

Drugs (continued) Violent offenders receiving early parole to create space for drug offenders with mandatory sentences Punishment ineffective with compulsive behaviors such as drug addiction Allocation of treatment resources very uneven, biased

Costs of Current Policies 690 of every 100,000 citizens incarcerated 7% of all state resources committed to prisons Average annual cost for minimum security male prisoner is $25,000 Reintegration programs cut to pay for operating costs of new prisons Harshness linked to recidivism

System Changes Courts greatly have broadened police powers in last 20 years Prosecutors’ discretion increasing, judicial discretion declining Increased victims’ rights can facilitate harshness or reintegration –Victim Impact Statements common –Mediation used in a few areas

New Technologies Computerized information sharing between agencies, jurisdictions –Biometrics: Recognition via fingerprints, voiceprints, or eye, hand, face shape –Smart cards: Hold biometrics, medial, legal, other data Victim updates on case, offender status computerized

Technologies (continued) Online medical care, education, training Defense equipment used in corrections Ground penetrating radar, puncture resistant clothes, heartbeat sensors DNA and similar forms of evidence Better, cheaper offender tracking, record storage/transfer = greater efficiency

The Correctional Mission Community corrections the main area for major changes Fears of discrimination and financial costs increasingly suggest need for new approaches Growing desire to give communities more autonomy in responding to crime

Restorative Justice Three simultaneous goals: –Assist victim –Prevent future crime –Reintegrate offender Acknowledges failure of punishment to alter behavior Focuses on assuring a better future for all

Community Justice Integrates corrections with area C.J agencies on formal and informal bases Also includes educational, welfare, health, housing, transportation etc, systems Broken Windows Approach: Potentially criminogenic situations are referred to appropriate agency BEFORE they get worse Most efforts experimental, places power mainly in hands of line practitioners –Resisted by hierarchical traditions of corrections/C.J.

Accreditation American Correctional Association (ACA) Sets standards that guide the policies and practices of many agencies Dozens of manuals set all sorts of standards for all types of agencies These standards often referred to by courts evaluating conditions and practices Accreditation is not a formal defense