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Privatized Prisons

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Privatized Prisons
Our country's criminal justice system is not nearly perfect. Imagine being in a jail where you must worry about being assaulted twice as much, you’re more likely to come back to after finally leaving, and they use your punishment for their profit. In our country, private prisons make this a reality for many inmates. The United States is faced with a broken criminal justice system due to privatized prisons; these greedy, for-profit prisons, are of lower quality and are a reason for high recidivism. To fix this, we must begin to fade away for these companies and return to just federal and state prisons.
The quality of for-profit prisons compares poorly to the quality of state prisons. “Because for-profit prison companies exist …show more content…

Like most other problems with private prisons, the problem is rooted in money. Programs that rehabilitate prisoners in preparation of sending them back out into the community are cut to save to the prisons money. As Graybill tells us, “A 2013 study by the Minnesota Department of Corrections suggests that a higher recidivism rate at privatized prisons was due to the lack of programs, like those that teach job skills and prepare prisoners for life after release...” With programs like these, people are setup to go back into the communities just to make the same bad decisions. As a result the same people who left prison land right back in and make the private prisons more money. There is more issues involving recidivism and private …show more content…

ALEC is a private group made up of businesses and politicians who propose bills to be passed. Each proposed bill usually benefits one or more businesses who are part of ALEC. They pushed bills such as mandatory sentences, three strikes and you’re out, and more. These laws generated a larger number of bodies to fill private prisons allowing for them to make more money. This has resulted in the United states, according to 13th, having just five percent of the world's population, but a shocking twenty five percent of the world’s prisoners. Our criminal justice system obviously has a few flaws.
What do we need to do about this? The answer is clear. We must fade away from the use of these jails. Lisa Graybill’s article tells us the “U.S. Justice Department announced its plan to phase out the use of private prisons...” However she goes on to say, since the year 2000 the number of prisoners in these jails has increased fifty percent, Florida has privatized all of its juvenile-residential programs, and they still house a total of 130,000 inmates. The country has to be serious about closing private prisons and sticking to only federal and state

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