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Journal ArticleDOI

Liberal but Not Stupid: Meeting the Promise of Downsizing Prisons

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TLDR
In this context, reducing America's prisons has materialized as a viable possibility as discussed by the authors, and the issue of downsizing will also remain at the forefront of correctional discourse because of the court-ordered reduction in imprisonment in California.
Abstract
A confluence of factors — a perfect storm — interfered with the intractable rise of imprisonment and contributed to the emergence of a new sensibility defining continued mass imprisonment as non-sustainable. In this context, reducing America’s prisons has materialized as a viable possibility. For progressives who have long called for restraint in the use of incarceration, the challenge is whether the promise of downsizing can be met. The failure of past reforms aimed at decarceration stand as a sobering reminder that good intentions do not easily translate into good results. Further, a number of other reasons exist for why meaningful downsizing might well fail (e.g., the enormous scale of imprisonment that must be confronted, limited mechanisms available to release inmates, lack of quality alternative programs). Still, reasons also exist for optimism, the most important of which is the waning legitimacy of the paradigm of mass incarceration, which has produced efforts to lower inmate populations and close institutions in various states. The issue of downsizing will also remain at the forefront of correctional discourse because of the court-ordered reduction in imprisonment in California. This experiment is ongoing, but is revealing the difficulty of downsizing; the initiative appears to be producing mixed results (e.g., reductions in the state’s prison population but increased in local jail populations). In the end, successful downsizing must be “liberal but not stupid.” Thus, reform efforts must be guided not only by progressive values but also by a clear reliance on scientific knowledge about corrections and on a willingness to address the pragmatic issues that can thwart good intentions. Ultimately, a “criminology of downsizing” must be developed to foster effective policy interventions.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Prisoner Reentry Programs

TL;DR: A wide diversity of reentry services fall under the rubric of "reentry services" and only a limited number of rigorous evaluations have been conducted as mentioned in this paper, which suggests that, overall, reentry service reduce recidivism, but program effects are heterogeneous and at times criminogenic.
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Reinventing Community Corrections

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that community corrections will reduce recidivism only if its use is viewed as a legitimate form of punishment and incentivized, which involves subsidizing the use of community sanctions and making communities pay to imprison offenders (e.g., a cap-and-trade system).
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The End of an Era? Understanding the Contradictions of Criminal Justice Reform:

TL;DR: The authors analyzed trends in criminal justice policy reform from 2000 to 2013 and newspaper stories and editorials on criminal justice reform since 2008 and found that these changes do not constitute a paradigm shift, but are indicative of a more subtle, complex, and contradictory modification of the way punishment is conceived, discussed and discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bifurcation nation: American penal policy in late mass incarceration:

TL;DR: The question has been posed whether current developments in American penal policy toward reducing prison populations and sentences for low-level, nonviolent offenses might reflect the end of the ma... as discussed by the authors.
References
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Book

The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness

TL;DR: The mass incarceration of a disproportionate number of black men amounts to a devastating system of racial control in the UK as much as in the US as mentioned in this paper, despite the triumphant dismantling of the Jim Crow laws, the system that once forced African-Americans into a segregated second-class citizenship still haunts and the criminal justice system still unfairly targets black men.
Book

The Culture of Control: Crime and Social Order in Contemporary Society

David Garland
TL;DR: A history of modern criminal justice and the Penal-Welfare state can be found in this paper, with a focus on the culture of high crime and the New Culture of Crime Control.
Book

The Psychology of Criminal Conduct

TL;DR: For instance, the authors investigates the relationship between the beginning and maintenance of criminal activity and diverse risk predictors (singular and social, static and dynamic) in the development of criminal behaviour.
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