With consequential reprehensible policies, mass incarceration became a significant political issue prompting the need for federal prison reforms and solutions to an ongoing crisis.Likewise, California Proposition 47 is an attempt, along with Proposition 36, to begin the long awaited prison reforms. Thus, with the political enthusiasm surrounding Proposition 47, there came groups of supporters and opponents making political arguments regarding the ballot measure. One of the central arguments against of the Proposition 47, initiated by Californians Against Proposition 47, suggested that a proposal will “reclassify a wide range of [serious and violent] crimes from felonies to misdemeanors and would result in the resentencing and release of thousands…
In this Prison Term Policy Recommendation Proposal essay it wants you to be a criminologist advisor. The scenario is: According to University of Phoenix (2015)’’You are the criminologist advisor to a member of the state legislature. The legislature will soon vote on a bill that, if it passes, would double the maximum prison term for anyone convicted of armed robbery. Your boss knowns the bill is popular, but wonders if it will do much good”. Consider policy making as it relates to criminal offenses. What recommendations would you? What are the reasons for your recommendations? Is this good bill or a bad?…
executed by lethal injection. Prior to being executed, Carlos had spent some time in prison,…
Mass incarceration is a form of functionalism theory because the reason mass incarceration is seen not as a problem by other people it is because they have shared beliefs that when you do wrong you should be imprisoned regardless of the crime you have committed. The government has sent laws that every citizen should abide by and therefore if you break the law you should be imprisoned , sadly this system has mostly affected the minority group: black people and latino's who are given longer jail time than white people even the crime is the same. these people are sent to jail are seen as people who are unable to interact with society and therefore they do not belong to society and most people agree with this because they all share the same beliefs…
Ava DuVernay’s film “The 13th” showed the history of mass incarceration, especially Black criminalization. She got the title from the 13th amendment from the Constitution that freed the slaves and stopped servitude except for those who committed criminal offenses. She explained how America has used this loophole in order to exploit it and jail as many people as they could. After the Civil War there was a huge shortage of labor so in order to basically get that free labor (slavery) back, they went on arresting mass amounts of Black people for minor crimes such as loitering. This film showed the cause and ramifications of Black criminalization in a time period format the same way that Christianson…
Under Proposition 47, thousands of dangerous felons are eligible for early release from state prison. According to The San Diego Union-Tribune newspaper’s website, an independent analyst said that many of the felons have violent criminal histories. This concept would pose a threat to our neighborhoods. Releasing these felons out into society is a mistake. Proposition 47 states it will reduce some charges, which is like giving these felons a slap on the hand.…
Over the last two decades (1980-2000), the US prison population has increased 450%. California has led the nation in prison growth since the early 1980s, and it incarcerated a higher percentage of its population than any nation on earth by 1994. The same year California enacted a controversial sentencing law that will drive prison growth for decades to come. This is the story of that law.…
Mass incarceration reveals the essence of the problems in America’s criminal justice system. It shines light on the presence of inequality as well as the flaws in the policies. Mass incarceration became a huge problem in the US with the onset of the War on Drugs. Since then, the number of prisoners has increased significantly and a great proportion of the prisoners include drug offenders. Beckett and Sasson argue that the inequality here lies in the fact that members in the minority populations are sought after because unlike many private transactions that happens amongst upper class individuals, those that take place between members of the lower class tend to be more visible.…
Our biggest problem in the United States is mass incarceration. We send more people to prison than any other nation in the world, and people of color make up more than 50% of incarcerated population. When the Thirteenth Amendment was passed, abolishing slavery it still gave leeway to some loopholes. The significant loophole in the Amendment was that, though: It stated that slavery and involuntary servitude are illegal, "except as punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted." So this loophole means I think that people who are imprisoned are technically considered the property of the state or federal government so they do not have rights, which is similar to the slavery time period.…
Mass incarceration has many costs associated with it besides for the punishment of the offender. For many people, they have no idea how badly an incarceration can destroy someones entire life, and family. Mass incarceration affects everyone, the offender, their family, and the entire community as a whole. I believe that there are three major consequences and costs that are encored by mass incarceration, and they each effect either the offender, their family, or the seemingly unrelated community.…
During the mass mobilization of consciousness raising in the late 1960’s, the fight for democracy roared the elites to manifest into power through a global project which not only implemented policies to sustain global capitalism, but advocated for various systems that work to control society, as well as the future reality of certain communities. According to research done by the Department of Political Science at the University of Pennsylvania, “Throughout American history, politicians and public officials have exploited public anxieties about crime and disorder for political gain” (Gottschalk). This includes the war on drugs and war on terrorism, which has sustained a movement of mass criminalization, in the name of public safety. However this safety has been a way to suppress those trying to challenge the status quo and reveal the true underlying which sparked the rise of mass incarceration.…
1. Hundreds of thousands of black men are unable to be good fathers for their children, not because of the lack of commitment or desire but because they are warehoused in the prisons, locked in cages. They did not walk out on their families voluntarily; they were taken away in handcuffs, often due to a massive federal program known as the War on Drugs.…
Incarceration rates in The United States have grown drastically and are rapidly increasing. About 5% of the population will, on average, serve a sentence of about 60 months or more in prison . This rise in incarceration rates has disproportionally affected women . From 1988 to 2008, the imprisonment rate for women has increased by 600%, while for men it has increased by 300% . Currently about 1 million women pass through prisons every year of about 3.2 million arrests. Out of these sentences, about 67% were drug convictions.…
According to Michelle Alexander, mass incarceration defines the meaning of blackness in America today. That is to say, being black connotes being a criminal and being a criminal is a contemporary “code word” for being black. The new Jim Crow evolved as a rebranded way to deal with race in America or as Alexander put it, an adaptation to the demands of the current political climate. It is perfectly legitimate in this day and age to discriminate against criminals just as it was to explicitly discriminate against people of color. However, the increase in incarceration has mainly targeted this same group (people of color) which is why it is just a relabeled system; African Americans are still facing the brunt of discrimination under new terms.…
America land of the free and home of the great, But in all reality is America as great is…