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U.S. INCARCERATION RATES: . A STATISTICAL ANALYSIS OF “RACIAL” INEQUALITIES. DAVID BOIKE CMTY111 M-W 3:30. “Incarceration” Defined:. Incarceration is the state of being imprisoned or confined.
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U.S. INCARCERATION RATES: A STATISTICAL ANALYSIS OF “RACIAL” INEQUALITIES DAVID BOIKE CMTY111 M-W 3:30
“Incarceration” Defined: • Incarceration is the state of being imprisoned or confined. • Incarceration can be imposed if the nature of a crime is that in which the suspect must be held against his will by the government, while they are awaiting trial. • Incarceration is given, by a judge, as part of a sentence in a court of law, and its length depends on the severity and nature of the crime.
Different Facilities for Incarceration: • State prisons and local jails for adults convicted in state courts. • Federal prisons for persons convicted in federal courts. • Various types of residential institutions (for example, training schools) for juveniles found delinquent in juvenile courts.
Just the Facts: • The United States has nearly 2,000 separate prison facilities. • The United States currently has nearly 2.6 million inmates residing in federal and state facilities. • The United States leads the world in inmates per capita, at 748 per every 100,000 citizens, or nearly 1% of the total population.
Famous United States Facilities: Louisiana State Penitentiary – 5,218 Inmates
Along Ethnic Lines: • Blacks have the highest ratio of life sentences per inmate. • Blacks have the highest ratio of “three time offender” convictions per inmate. • 1 in 8 Black men will spend time in prison.
Along Ethnic Lines: • Hispanics are convicted at a ratio of 2 to 1 when compared to whites. • Hispanics are the largest growing ethnicity is regards to Federal convictions.
But for the White Population… • Only 1 in 23 Whites will spend any time in prison. • Convictions of whites are repealed (reversed) at a rate of almost 5 to 1 compared to blacks, and almost 3 to 1 compared to Hispanics.
Changes in the trend: • The 1970’s and 1980’s brought a change in political and judicial policy. • The Federal Government, in response to the growing threats of drugs, enacted two major forms of legislation that are still prevalent in today’s society.
Basics of the new Policies: • 1971 – The War on Drugs • At a press conference, President Nixon states that he believes drug abuse is “public enemy number one”.
Basics of the new Policies: • 1973 – The Establishment of the DEA (Drug Enforcement Agency) • The DEA is a Federal agency, that works with state and local law enforcement to monitor, arrest, and assist in the conviction of persons violating drug laws.
Basics of the new Policies: • 1984 – The Sentencing Reform Act • Enacted into law a set of minimum mandatory sentences for many drug related convictions. • Took away federal and state judges authority to analyze mitigating and extenuating circumstances, and apply those findings into the sentences.
Basics of the new Policies: • 1984 – The Sentencing Reform Act • Crack Cocaine vs. Powder Cocaine • Adjusts the legality of different amounts of possession and their subsequent sentences.
Searching for an Explanation: • Mounting effects of oppression and discrimination. • Lack of access to good, solid education. • Vicious cycle of discrimination and lack of opportunity.
Educational Discrimination: • While schools are no longer officially segregated, injustices in the quality and location of housing pre-determine the quality of inner city schools. • College degrees are increasing at a rate of almost 2 to 1 when comparing between Whites and Blacks.
Occupational Over/Under Representation: • Blacks are under-represented in regards to managerial and professional jobs. • Blacks are over-represented in lower-paying blue collar jobs, and service labor work. • The unemployment rate for blacks in 2006 was more than twice the rate of white unemployment.
Housing Discrimination: • Blacks are disproportionately confined to inner city housing. • Blacks are more likely to live in sub-standard public housing than any other ethnicity. • Inner city and poorly funded urban areas have higher crime rates, and subsequent targeting by police forces.
How the Cycle Works: Lack of Quality Education Lack of Career Prospects Lower Paying Jobs Life of Crime/Reliance on Welfare Limited Ability to Find/Afford Adequate Housing
Other Speculations: • Black Identity Development (Tatum). • Black teens attempt to create an identity within their peer group. • Black teens reject things that seem “white”. • Black teens search to associate with cultural stereotypes.
Reversing the Trend:A Success Story • Urban Prep (Englewood Academy) – Chicago, IL • All Black male, public school. • Founded in 2006, when the freshman class had 4% of its students reading at a 9th grade level. • Stresses basic principles of integrity, accountability, and selflessness.
Reversing the Trend: A Success Story • 2010 • Urban Prep (Englewood) graduates all of 107 of it’s seniors. • All of the 107 seniors are accepted to over 72 colleges and universities around the nation.
Summary: • Laws have been shaped in the United States to be in favor of promoting the welfare of the majority. • Blacks are chronically disadvantaged in nearly all aspects of valued resources within a society. • Negative stereotypes of minorities in help produce unequal distribution of resources. • Unequal distribution of resources cyclically leads to lack of opportunity. • But….
Accountability • In the eyes of the U.S. Judicial System, a person is accountable for their individual actions. • The idea that the color of your skin, or the neighborhood you grew up in, predisposed you to commit a crime…doesn’t cut it. • The best way to stay out of prison or jail, no matter the color of your skin or the location of your housing or school is… • Don’t commit a crime.
Bibliography: • Tatum, B. (1997) Why Are All The Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria? New York: Basic Books • Aguirre A. & Turner J.(2009) American Ethnicity: The Dynamics and Consequences of Discrimination (6th Ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. • http://abclocal.go.com/wls/story?section=news/local&id=7494458 • http://www.justice.gov/05publications/05_3_a.html • http://2010.census.gov/2010census/data/ • http://www.urbanprep.org/about/pdf/Urban_Prep_Year_In_Review_2008_to_2009.pdf • http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/drugs/cron/
Bibliography: • http://www.bop.gov/ • http://www.reuters.com/article/2007/11/19/us-usa-prisons-idUSN1841666120071119 • http://www.sgc.wa.gov/PUBS/SPR%20Report.pdf • http://www.justice.gov/dea/history.htm • http://newsone.com/nation/associatedpress3/congress-votes-to-change-crack-vs-cocaine-sentencing-laws/ • http://www.sentencingproject.org/template/index.cfm