Descriptions:
1
Prison building creates
profits and gets "law and
order" candidates elected,
often with political contributions
that came from those profits. But,
Professor Davey argues, crime rates
rise and fall approximately the
same way in all fifty states regardless
of whether they invest in expensive
imprisonment programs. A cost-benefit
analysis of recent investments
in prisons concludes that the real
winners are not the taxpayers.
2
In the last two decades there
has been an unprecedented increase
in the use of imprisonment
in the United States. This
expansion of the imprisonment
rate did not happen in the
other Western democracies and,
more importantly, it happened
very unevenly among the fifty
states. Professor Davey examines
the change in the rate of imprisonment
in relationship to the crime
rate as well as six other socio-economic
variables. Davey then examines
a number of states in detail
to assess the key factors that
resulted in increased imprisonment.
Professor Davey concludes from
the analyses that "law and
order" politics of individual
governors was the pivotal factor
in the decision to expand prisons.
Expansion was neither an outgrowth
of unusual crime increases nor
an effective method of reducing
further crime increases, but
waging "war on crime" was
a very effective method of winning
elections. |