Pubdate: Thu, 03 May 2001 Source: Economist, The (UK) Copyright: 2001 The Economist Newspaper Limited Contact: http://www.economist.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/132 COMING TO A NEIGHBOURHOOD NEAR YOU A small hitch with America's policy of imprisoning more people than any other country on the planet: most have to be released at some point Jose Vasquez has a scar on his right cheek and a conviction for accidental manslaughter. Arrested at the age of 16, he was convicted as an adult and locked up for seven years in an upstate New York prison. He should have been released earlier, but the prison authorities dished out "disciplinary sanctions" for a series of fights. At first that meant solitary confinement; then, for several months, being locked in his cell for 23 hours a day. The parole board twice put off his release. Now Mr Vasquez is 25 years old, has been free for two years, but must do at least two more years of parole. Still, he counts himself "pretty fortunate". He was lucky because prison, eventually, turned his life around. "Prison made me realise I made a mistake, it really moulded me." Inside, he passed a high-school exam, then a college degree. In solitary confinement he read "poetry, novels, spy stories, a lot of stuff, some Freud," and started to write. After a couple of years of casual jobs, he now works at the Osborne Association, a New York group that helps ex-inmates to find jobs and homes. Last year it placed 1,162 ex-prisoners with local employers-not bad, considering that its average client is 33 years old, has only a sixth-grade education and has done four years behind bars. Few are as lucky as Mr Vasquez. Each year, hundreds of thousands of people leave America's prisons, but only a few thousand get help from groups such as Osborne. Most are ill-prepared for life outside, educated in little else but how to commit crimes more efficiently. Outside his job, Mr Vasquez unsurprisingly avoids cellmates who might lead him into "shady ways". States seem to put far more effort into locking up people than trying to reform them. In New York, Governor George Pataki has made a point of cutting prisoners' education and other services. Today, Mr Vasquez would be unable to "mould himself" with a college degree in prison. And, although vastly more criminals are jailed for drug offences than in the past, many states have cut efforts to rehabilitate inmates. The number of inmates in drug programmes dropped from 201,000 in 1993 to 99,000 in 1998. As the economy turns down, jobs will be harder to get; and there is an ever-rising number of ex-prisoners chasing them. An estimated 614,000 people will leave prison this year, says the Bureau of Justice, compared with 423,800 in 1990 and 156,400 in 1980. In all, there are now nearly 4.5m people on probation (served instead of detention) or on parole (served after detention). This army of ex-cons is the final, perhaps unforeseen, stage of the country's love affair with mandatory sentencing. Ever since the mid-1980s, politicians have won votes by promising to get tough with criminals. The most prominent effect has been in the law courts: limiting the discretion of judges to make the punishment fit the crime, and imposing harsh minimum terms. Between 1986 and 1997, average prison sentences (in federal prisons) increased from 39 months to 54 months. California's "three strikes" rule, which enforced a prison sentence for anybody caught committing a third felony (no matter how small), drove more into prison. Punishments for drug offences have been particularly severe. Drug-dealers can expect five-year or ten-year terms if caught. And the definition of drug-dealing is a harsh one, sweeping in spouses of dealers, whose crime may be simply failing to shop their husbands. Drug convictions are the reason for the massive growth in prison numbers. Once behind bars, inmates find it increasingly difficult to get out early. Parole boards are stricter than ever, quickly returning criminals to complete their sentences if, for example, they are found to be taking drugs. And, since prisoners are less likely than before to get time off for good behaviour, they have less incentive to behave well. The result: America's prison population has boomed, to roughly 2m. One person in 142 is behind bars, up from one in 218 a decade ago. America not only has more people in prison than anywhere else, but a higher incarceration rate (it recently passed Russia). It now spends $40 billion a year, roughly $20,000 per prisoner, on keeping offenders behind bars. What is the effect of having so many people passing through the prison system? Some argue that prison has helped to reduce the country's crime rate, which has been dropping steadily for a decade, by as much as 8% a year. James Wilson, a criminologist at the University of California in Los Angeles, points out that the median number of offences committed each year by those going to jug is now 12. Others, such as Alfred Blumstein, a professor at Carnegie Mellon, say that locking people up only partly explains the drop in crime. The rest is accounted for by changing economic fortunes, by shifting demography (when there are fewer young people, there is less crime), and by new fashions in drug abuse (crack cocaine is out of vogue, so the violence associated with its sale has declined). Either way, with more people leaving prison, there are more ex-convicts in society. Just as enthusiasts for tough sentences once sought to tie the prison population to lower crime rates, now opponents argue that it is spells in prison that are helping to increase criminal behaviour. Recidivism rates have not changed for decades, but there are far more ex-convicts: roughly two-thirds of the ex-cons are likely to be rearrested within three years, and 40% will probably go back behind bars. This debate will rumble on-not least because it is impossible to prove the deterrent effect of tougher sentences. But two things are happening. First, the crime rate has begun to edge up again in some places. In all, crime dropped by only 0.3% last year, much less than in recent years. In bigger cities, such as New York and Los Angeles, violent crimes such as murder (which tend to lead the way for other crime trends) are beginning to rise again. Some of that may be explained by a demographic bulge in young people, but it could also be explained by the large number of ex-cons in society. Second, in a delayed reaction to the generally lower crime rates of the past decade, the prison population is beginning to peak. Having risen on average by 5.6% for the past decade, last year it grew by only 2.3%, the lowest annual increase since 1971. In several states, including New York and Massachusetts, the number of people coming out of prison already exceeds the number going in. How this will affect public opinion remains to be seen. For most of the past decade, Americans have believed (wrongly) that the crime rate has been rising. They have generally supported building more prisons, partly because this brings jobs, but also because of their punitive effect. The reintroduction of chain-gangs, or dressing inmates in pink uniforms and giving them mind-numbing work, are all popular. In a new book on prisons, "Going up the River: Travels in a Prison Nation" (Random House), Joseph Hallinan cites surveys showing that, 30 years ago, most Americans saw the purpose of prison as rehabilitation. Now they say it is punishment. Among the fruits of that policy are the bulging penitentiaries across the country-and the flood of ex-cons now hitting the streets. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager