If they were moved all at once, they could almost replace the population
of Jamaica (2.7 million) and they would leave Qatar, Namibia,
Macedonia, or Latvia swimming in extra people. I’m talking about the
incarcerated in America -- an estimated 2.4 million
people at any moment in “1,719 state prisons, 102 federal prisons,
2,259 juvenile correctional facilities, 3,283 local jails, and 79 Indian
Country jails as well as in military prisons, immigration detention
facilities, civil commitment centers, and prisons in the U.S.
territories.”
That’s just about one of every 100 Americans, more than 60% of whom are people of color. Add in another almost five million on probation or in some way under the supervision of the criminal justice system and you've reached about seven million, the equivalent of the population of Serbia or Paraguay. In other words, a reasonably sized nation of prisoners.
Not surprisingly, that's also the largest prison population on
Earth. No other country comes close. Put another way, on any day of
your choice, the United States, with 5% of the world’s population, has
close to 25%
of the people imprisoned on this planet. That population, by the way,
has risen by 700% since 1970, a tidal movement for incarceration that
only in recent years has shown small signs of finally ebbing. In short, state by state or as a country, the U.S. leaves the rest of the world in the dust. (USA! USA!)
And that’s just to scratch the surface of what, if we were being
honest, would have to be called the American Gulag, a vast carceral
archipelago that no other country can match and into which millions of
human beings are simply deep-sixed. The urge to reform such a system
should be applauded, but as with so many “reforms” in our era, the
latest “alternative” forms of confinement may, in the end, only be
extending and expanding the prison system into other parts of American
life. It may, suggests Maya Schenwar, editor-in-chief of Truthout and author of the new book Locked Down, Locked Out: Why Prison Doesn't Work and How We Can Do Better, ensure that new concepts of how to lock down America are coming to a neighborhood near you.
from here
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