U.S. Prison Population Dwarfs
That Of Other Nations
by Adam liptak
www.iht.com/, April 23, 2008
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.)
San Marino, with a population of about
30,000, is at the end of the long list of 218 countries compiled
by the center. It has a single prisoner.
The United States comes in first, too,
on a more meaningful list from the prison studies center, the
one ranked in order of the incarceration rates. It has 751 people
in prison or jail for every 100,000 in population. (If you count
only adults, one in 100 Americans is locked up.)
The only other major industrialized nation
that even comes close is Russia, with 627 prisoners for every
100,000 people. The others have much lower rates. England's rate
is 151; Germany's is 88; and Japan's is 63.
The median among all nations is about
125, roughly a sixth of the American rate.
There is little question that the high
incarceration rate here has helped drive down crime, though there
is debate about how much.
Criminologists and legal experts here
and abroad point to a tangle of factors to explain America's extraordinary
incarceration rate: higher levels of violent crime, harsher sentencing
laws, a legacy of racial turmoil, a special fervor in combating
illegal drugs, the American temperament, and the lack of a social
safety net. Even democracy plays a role, as judges - many of whom
are elected, another American anomaly - yield to populist demands
for tough justice.
Whatever the reason, the gap between American
justice and that of the rest of the world is enormous and growing.
It used to be that Europeans came to the
United States to study its prison systems. They came away impressed.
"In no country is criminal justice
administered with more mildness than in the United States,"
Alexis de Tocqueville, who toured American penitentiaries in 1831,
wrote in "Democracy in America."
No more.
"Far from serving as a model for
the world, contemporary America is viewed with horror," James
Whitman, a specialist in comparative law at Yale, wrote last year
in Social Research. "Certainly there are no European governments
sending delegations to learn from us about how to manage prisons."
Prison sentences here have become "vastly
harsher than in any other country to which the United States would
ordinarily be compared," Michael Tonry, a leading authority
on crime policy, wrote in "The Handbook of Crime and Punishment."
Indeed, said Vivien Stern, a research
fellow at the prison studies center in London, the American incarceration
rate has made the United States "a rogue state, a country
that has made a decision not to follow what is a normal Western
approach."
The spike in American incarceration rates
is quite recent. From 1925 to 1975, the rate remained stable,
around 110 people in prison per 100,000 people. It shot up with
the movement to get tough on crime in the late 1970s. (These numbers
exclude people held in jails, as comprehensive information on
prisoners held in state and local jails was not collected until
relatively recently.)
The nation's relatively high violent crime
rate, partly driven by the much easier availability of guns here,
helps explain the number of people in American prisons.
"The assault rate in New York and
London is not that much different," said Marc Mauer, the
executive director of the Sentencing Project, a research and advocacy
group. "But if you look at the murder rate, particularly
with firearms, it's much higher."
Despite the recent decline in the murder
rate in the United States, it is still about four times that of
many nations in Western Europe.
But that is only a partial explanation.
The United States, in fact, has relatively low rates of nonviolent
crime. It has lower burglary and robbery rates than Australia,
Canada and England.
People who commit nonviolent crimes in
the rest of the world are less likely to receive prison time and
certainly less likely to receive long sentences. The United States
is, for instance, the only advanced country that incarcerates
people for minor property crimes like passing bad checks, Whitman
wrote.
Efforts to combat illegal drugs play a
major role in explaining long prison sentences in the United States
as well. In 1980, there were about 40,000 people in American jails
and prisons for drug crimes. These days, there are almost 500,000.
Those figures have drawn contempt from
European critics. "The U.S. pursues the war on drugs with
an ignorant fanaticism," said Stern of King's College.
Many American prosecutors, on the other
hand, say that locking up people involved in the drug trade is
imperative, as it helps thwart demand for illegal drugs and drives
down other kinds of crime. Attorney General Michael Mukasey, for
instance, has fought hard to prevent the early release of people
in federal prison on crack cocaine offenses, saying that many
of them "are among the most serious and violent offenders."
Still, it is the length of sentences that
truly distinguishes American prison policy. Indeed, the mere number
of sentences imposed here would not place the United States at
the top of the incarceration lists. If lists were compiled based
on annual admissions to prison per capita, several European countries
would outpace the United States. But American prison stays are
much longer, so the total incarceration rate is higher.
Burglars in the United States serve an
average of 16 months in prison, according to Mauer, compared with
5 months in Canada and 7 months in England.
Many specialists dismissed race as an
important distinguishing factor in the American prison rate. It
is true that blacks are much more likely to be imprisoned than
other groups in the United States, but that is not a particularly
distinctive phenomenon. Minorities in Canada, Britain and Australia
are also disproportionately represented in those nation's prisons,
and the ratios are similar to or larger than those in the United
States.
Some scholars have found that English-speaking
nations have higher prison rates.
"Although it is not at all clear
what it is about Anglo-Saxon culture that makes predominantly
English-speaking countries especially punitive, they are,"
Tonry wrote last year in "Crime, Punishment and Politics
in Comparative Perspective."
"It could be related to economies
that are more capitalistic and political cultures that are less
social democratic than those of most European countries,"
Tonry wrote. "Or it could have something to do with the Protestant
religions with strong Calvinist overtones that were long influential."
The American character - self-reliant,
independent, judgmental - also plays a role.
"America is a comparatively tough
place, which puts a strong emphasis on individual responsibility,"
Whitman of Yale wrote. "That attitude has shown up in the
American criminal justice of the last 30 years."
French-speaking countries, by contrast,
have "comparatively mild penal policies," Tonry wrote.
Of course, sentencing policies within
the United States are not monolithic, and national comparisons
can be misleading.
"Minnesota looks more like Sweden
than like Texas," said Mauer of the Sentencing Project. (Sweden
imprisons about 80 people per 100,000 of population; Minnesota,
about 300; and Texas, almost 1,000. Maine has the lowest incarceration
rate in the United States, at 273; and Louisiana the highest,
at 1,138.)
Whatever the reasons, there is little
dispute that America's exceptional incarceration rate has had
an impact on crime.
"As one might expect, a good case
can be made that fewer Americans are now being victimized"
thanks to the tougher crime policies, Paul Cassell, an authority
on sentencing and a former federal judge, wrote in The Stanford
Law Review.
From 1981 to 1996, according to Justice
Department statistics, the risk of punishment rose in the United
States and fell in England. The crime rates predictably moved
in the opposite directions, falling in the United States and rising
in England.
"These figures," Cassell wrote,
"should give one pause before too quickly concluding that
European sentences are appropriate."
Other commentators were more definitive.
"The simple truth is that imprisonment works," wrote
Kent Scheidegger and Michael Rushford of the Criminal Justice
Legal Foundation in The Stanford Law and Policy Review. "Locking
up criminals for longer periods reduces the level of crime. The
benefits of doing so far offset the costs."
There is a counterexample, however, to
the north. "Rises and falls in Canada's crime rate have closely
paralleled America's for 40 years," Tonry wrote last year.
"But its imprisonment rate has remained stable."
Several specialists here and abroad pointed
to a surprising explanation for the high incarceration rate in
the United States: democracy.
Most state court judges and prosecutors
in the United States are elected and are therefore sensitive to
a public that is, according to opinion polls, generally in favor
of tough crime policies. In the rest of the world, criminal justice
professionals tend to be civil servants who are insulated from
popular demands for tough sentencing.
Whitman, who has studied Tocqueville's
work on American penitentiaries, was asked what accounted for
America's booming prison population.
"Unfortunately, a lot of the answer
is democracy - just what Tocqueville was talking about,"
he said. "We have a highly politicized criminal justice system."
Prison watch
Home Page