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Pamela Oliver Presentation to Governor’s Commission May 22 2007. The Scope of the Problem & How to Measure it. Outline. National overview Compare Wisconsin to US Scatterplots Timetrends Wisconsin Trends by Admission type, race & offense County Imprisonment Patterns County Arrest Patterns
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Pamela OliverPresentation to Governor’s Commission May 22 2007 The Scope of the Problem & How to Measure it Pamela Oliver
Outline • National overview • Compare Wisconsin to US • Scatterplots • Timetrends • Wisconsin Trends by Admission type, race & offense • County Imprisonment Patterns • County Arrest Patterns • Addressing the disparities • Steps in the process • Evidence at steps • Where we lack evidence Pamela Oliver
National Trends: The Magnitude of the Problem Pamela Oliver
Comparing International Incarceration Rates (Source: Sentencing Project) Pamela Oliver
World Incarceration Rates in 1995: Adding US Race Patterns Pamela Oliver
Nationally, The Black Population is Being Imprisoned at Alarming Rates • Nearly 40% of the Black male population is under the supervision of the correctional system (prison, jail, parole, probation) • Estimated “lifetime expectancy” of spending some time in prison is about 32% for young Black men. • About 12% of Black men in their 20s are incarcerated (prison + jail), about 20% of all Black men have been in prison • 7% of Black children, 2.6% of Hispanic children, .8% of White children had a parent in prison in 1997 – lifetime expectancy much higher Pamela Oliver
About Rates & Disparity Ratios [Relative Rate Ratios] • Imprisonment and arrest rates are expressed as the rate per 100,000 of the appropriate population • Example: In 1999 Wisconsin new prison sentences • 1021 Whites imprisoned, White population of Wisconsin was 4,701,123. • 1021 ÷ 4701123 = .000217. • Multiply .00021 by 100,000 = 22, the imprisonment rate per 100,000 population. • 1,266 Blacks imprisoned, Black population of Wisconsin was 285,308. • 1266 ÷ 285308 = .004437. • Multiply by 100,000 = 444 • Calculate Disparity Ratios by dividing rates: • 444/22 = 20.4 the Black/White ratio in new prison sentence rates Pamela Oliver
Black and White prison admissions, historical Pamela Oliver
Imprisonment Has Increased While Crime Has Declined • Imprisonment rates are a function of responses to crime, not a function of crime itself • Property crimes declined steadily between 1970s and 2000 • Violent crime declined modestly overall, with smaller ups and downs in the period Pamela Oliver
Crime Trends Based on Bureau of Justice Statistics data from National Crime Victimization Survey. Pamela Oliver
Property Crime Pamela Oliver
Violent Crime Pamela Oliver
Violent Crime by Sex of Victim Pamela Oliver
So what has been going on? Pamela Oliver
The 1970’s Policy Shift • Shift to determinate sentencing, higher penalties • LEAA, increased funding for police departments • Crime becomes a political issue (Social turmoil & crime were high) • Drug war funding gives incentives to police to generate drug arrests & convictions: this escalates in the 1980s • Post-civil rights post-riots competitive race relations, race-coded political rhetoric.? Pamela Oliver
Black/White RRI by type of prison admission Revocations All Admits New Sentences In Prison 1999 1982 Pamela Oliver
RRI by offense: new sentences) only Drug Violent Rob & Burg Theft Other Pamela Oliver
Rates: Black & White, drug vs other sentences Pamela Oliver
National White Prison Sentence Rates by Offense 18 Other Theft Violent Drug Rob/burg 0 1983 1999 Pamela Oliver
National Black Prison Sentences by Offense 300 Drug Rob/burg Violent Theft Other 0 1983 1999 Pamela Oliver
Drug Disparities • Nationally, Black juveniles & young adults (those under 26) use illegal drugs at LOWER RATES than White juveniles • Only among those over 25 are illegal drug use rates higher for Blacks than Whites, but the disparities are much lower than the imprisonment disparities Pamela Oliver
Black/White disparity in self-reported illegal drug use within the past year Compare to prison sentence disparity of 15 at end of 1990s Disparity < 1, Whites use more than Blacks Calculated from 2003 National Survey on Drug Use & Health, Department of Health & Human Services Pamela Oliver
Comparing Wisconsin to Other States Sources are from the Bureau of Justice Statistics Pamela Oliver
Prisons and Jails in Midyear 2005 This is “total incarceration” rate per 100,000 population Pamela Oliver
Pamela Oliver Black/White Disparity is not the same as the Black rate
Pamela Oliver Black/White Disparity is negatively related to the White rate
In State Prisons, 1998 (This is the most recent year for which I have been able to find these data) Pamela Oliver
Pamela Oliver Note: Rates include Hispanics, who are almost all counted as White
Pamela Oliver Note: Rates include Hispanics, who are almost all counted as White
Pamela Oliver Note: Rates include Hispanics, who are almost all counted as White
Prison Admissions: National Corrections Reporting Program 1983-1999 (Hispanics not included in Black & White rates) Pamela Oliver
Pamela Oliver Note: MN counts probation revocations as new sentences while WI does not
Pamela Oliver Note: MN counts probation revocations as new sentences while WI does not
Pamela Oliver Note: MN counts probation revocations as new sentences
Pamela Oliver Disparity is different from Black rate
Wisconsin vs. US Trends Summary • Steep rise in Black imprisonment rates of all types after 1988 • Revocations far above average in Wisconsin. Some due to data coding differences. Much is “real.” • Drug sentences in Wisconsin are even more disparate than the nation as a whole: high Black & low White rates • Black non-drug sentences in Wisconsin are a little above average while the White sentence rate is far below average, thus yielding a high disparity. Pamela Oliver