- Joined
- Mar 21, 2024
- Messages
- 1,749
- Reaction score
- 1,570
- Gender
- Male
- Political Leaning
- Slightly Liberal
How to reduce recidivism is well known. Sadly, most Americans don’t want to go down that path. If we did, it would save us billions of dollars and much untold suffering.You wrote: "the rate of recidivism may come down or you could just continue to treat people like utter shit and the cycle of re-incarceration in for profit prisons will continue forever."
There is no evidence the rate of recidivism will ever come down. And to suggest putting in air conditioning for prisoners will bring that rate down is utter fantasy.
And if recidivist prisoners continue "to treat people (their victims) like utter shit", re-incarceration will be the future of these failed criminals.
Find some other stupid criminals to pity.
Sentencing and Prison Practices in Germany and the Netherlands
Implications for the United States
The U.S. prison population has increased 700 percent in the last 40 years, and state corrections expenditures reached $53.5 billion in 2012. Despite this massive investment in incarceration, the national recidivism rate remains at a stubborn 40 percent—meaning that four in 10 incarcerated people will return to prison within three years of release.
German and Dutch prison systems are organized around central tenets of resocialization and rehabilitation. The U.S. system is organized around the central tenets of incapacitation and retribution.
Germany and the Netherlands incarcerate about one tenth the percentage of their population as opposed to the US.
I encourage everyone to read the full report linked above.
Should our institutions focus on rehabilitation or pure penalty wrt to those convicted of crime?
It’s obvious what those who are gleeful when hearing about the suffering of others feel about that issue.
Last edited: