The United States has less than 5 percent of the world’s population. But it has almost a quarter of the world’s prisoners. Indeed, the United States leads the world in producing prisoners, a reflection of a relatively recent and now entirely distinctive American approach to crime and punishment. Americans are locked up for crimes – from writing bad checks to using drugs – that would rarely produce prison sentences in other countries. And in particular they are kept incarcerated far longer than prisoners in other nations. Criminologists and legal scholars in other industrialized nations say they are mystified and appalled by the number and length of American prison sentences. The United States has, for instance, 2.3 million criminals behind bars, more than any other nation, according to data maintained by the International Center for Prison Studies at King’s College London. China, which is four times more populous than the United States, is a distant second, with 1.6 million people in prison. (That number excludes hundreds of thousands of people held in administrative detention, most of them in China’s extrajudicial system of re-education through labor, which often singles out political activists who have not committed crimes.) […]
Thursday, April 24th, 2008
American Exception: Inmate Count in U.S. Dwarfs Other Nations’
Author: ADAM LIPTAK
Source: The New York Times
Publication Date: 23-Apr-08
Link: American Exception: Inmate Count in U.S. Dwarfs Other Nations’
Source: The New York Times
Publication Date: 23-Apr-08
Link: American Exception: Inmate Count in U.S. Dwarfs Other Nations’
Stephan: There is something fundamentally awry in America. Uniquely, amongst industrialized nations, we have no national health care system. Almost 50 million Americans have no health insurance. Yet we maintain a gulag that dwarfs every other system on the planet. Does this strike you, as it does me, as a manifestation of the wrong priorities?
Thanks to Russell Targ.