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Crisis And The Consequences Of Overcrowding

Decent Essays

Aakash REGMI,
Prof. Meghan Jordan
ENG 101
December 14, 2014
Crisis and the consequences of overcrowding

Why prison? Why punishment? Punishment is a natural response to fear and injury, given by someone in a higher authority; and prison seems to be the favorite punishment all over the world, especially in America. More than 11 million people out of 7 billion,the world’s population, are confined in penal institutions throughout the world. Almost half of these are in United States (2.24m), Russia (0.68m) or China (1.64m sentenced prisoners) without counting the prisoners in North Korea and in detention in China.The United States single handedly holds about a quarter of the world’s inmates. "No matter what the question has been in American criminal justice over the last generation," says Franklin E. Zimring, the director of the Earl Warren Legal Institute, "prison has been the answer." (Schlosser).The main function of prison started out as a way to rehabilitate inmates, but nowadays, due to overcrowding, they are being deprived of their rights. Overcrowding continues to be the number one problem in the correctional systems of America. At the end of 1994, state prisons were between 17 and 29 percent above capacity; the federal system was 25 percent above capacity (Furniss qtd. in Pollock 66). Now the rate is 37 percent, and still increasing. In the United States the prison rates continue to increase despite decreasing crime rates. More people, and for a longer period of time,

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