JUSTICE SYSTEM

Harsh Sentencing, Overstuffed Prisons—It’s Time for Reform: Nonviolent Offenders Make Up 90% of the Federal Prison Population

Too many people are in prison who should not be there. How many? Most of…

Why America’s Mass Incarceration Experiment Failed

The provost of Rutgers University-Newark, Todd Clear specializes in the study of criminal justice, and…

Prison and the Poverty Trap

WASHINGTON — Why are so many American families trapped in poverty? Of all the explanations…

New Research Shows High Risk of Eviction for Women in Predominately Black Neighborhoods

For America’s poorest renters — particularly black women — evictions are disturbingly common, trapping them…

Toxic Persons: New Research Shows Precisely How the Prison-to-Poverty Cycle Does Its Damage

Forty years after the United States began its experimentation with mass incarceration policies, the country…

Crime and Punishment: Some Costs of Inequality

Once upon a time, economists told us that efforts to reduce income inequality would be…

Economic Inequality and the Rise in U.S. Imprisonment

Abstract This paper relates the growth in men’s prison admission rates to increasing economic inequality…