View Full Version : Study Finds Big Increase in Black Men as Inmates Since 1980


jnv512
08-28-2002, 10:11 AM
August 28, 2002
Study Finds Big Increase in Black Men as Inmates Since 1980
By FOX BUTTERFIELD


he number of black men in jail or prison has grown fivefold in the past 20 years, to the point where more black men are behind bars than are enrolled in colleges or universities, according to a study released yesterday.

The increase in the black male prison population coincides with the prison construction boom that began 1980. At that time, three times more black men were enrolled in institutions of higher learning than behind bars, the study said.

The report was prepared by the Justice Policy Institute, a Washington-based research and advocacy group that supports alternatives to incarceration.

The study found that in 2000 there were 791,600 black men in jail or prison and 603,032 enrolled in colleges or universities. By contrast, the study said that in 1980 there were 143,000 black men in jail or prison but 463,700 enrolled in colleges or universities.

Some criminal justice experts said it was misleading to compare the two categories because the number in jail and prison includes all adult black men 17 years or older, while the number in institutions of higher learning is confined to a narrower student-age population in their late teens and early twenties.

But Todd Clear, a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in Manhattan, said the study's findings were still significant and "tell us there has been a public policy far overemphasizing investment in criminal justice instead of in education for this population."

"It tells you that the life chances of a black male going to prison is greater today than the chances of a black male going to college, and it wasn't always this way," Professor Clear said.

The study did not directly address why the number of black men in jail and prison climbed so quickly. Some experts suggested as one explanation a rise in the number of black men serving time for drug offenses. But Justice Department figures show that from 1990 to 2000, 50 percent of the growth in inmate populations at state prisons was for violent crimes, and that only 20 percent was for drug crimes.

During the prison-building boom of the last two decades, the number of Americans of all races in jail or prison quadrupled, to 2.1 million in 2000 from 502,000 in 1980, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics. In that same period, the number of Americans of all races attending colleges and universities rose to 14.8 million from 12.1 million, according to the National Center for Education Statistics, an increase of 22 percent.

Hilary O. Shelton, the director of the Washington chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said, "It is indeed a sad statement about our nation that it appears to be easier for governments to invest precious public dollars into the incarceration of African-American men than it is for them to invest in higher education."

Vincent Schiraldi, the president of the Justice Policy Institute, noted the report found that the number of black men in jail or prison grew three times as fast from 1980 to 2000 as the rise in the number of black men in colleges and universities.



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B-Ray
08-28-2002, 11:42 AM
Comparing inmates to students is interesting. But it's comparing apples and oranges to come up with there percentages.

What the report doesn't cover, is how many inmates are repeater and how many times!

We know that a student will go through there course of study and not return.

If the inmate population grows by 20% new crime and 80% repeaters just shows that only 20% new people have been brought into the system, and how effective the system really operates.

If the student population grows by 20% it shows a trend to higher learning and how effective it operates.

The question is, are there more black people committing 1st time crimes or more black people being repeaters that cause's these percentages?

jdswifey02
08-28-2002, 08:32 PM
Interesting questions BRay..... There are a lot of complexities anytime you look at study data....
But I have seen the sad trend in my personal and professional life..... and have seen so many ways that the "system" our society has developed is flawed....
:( Of course.... I don't want to imply that there isn't a great deal of personal responsibility there too!!! Let's hope the trend turns around.... an individual life at a time.....
My best friend (who is a black male.... who was just released from his first period of incarceration) is going back to college.... :) So.... I guess he can get counted twice in the "school" category.. and God willing he will never see the inside of a "correctional" center again!!! :)

PreciousQueen
08-29-2002, 12:34 AM
I feel the need to point out the fact that African Americans or Blacks only account for 12% of the total U.S. population and make up 65% of the 6.6 billion prison population? This is NOT COOL! Most blacks do not get the best representation in their cases -- usually Public Defenders who get paid by the State to begin with -- no personal interest (unless of course they feel it's their calling to help the needy) -- so they go to prison. Period. We call is "modern day slavery" tactics. I also feel that comparing it to college attendance is totally irrelevant -- the reporters or source is trying to "whitewash" the fact that there's something terribly wrong -- they're trying to make it look like "other blacks make the CHOICE to go to college then these blacks make the choice to go to prison" -- CRAP-OLA! I know that incarceration comes from committing crimes -- but this is not justice, as Richard Pryor puts it in his fact-based jokes -- it's "Just-US!"

aprilcat
08-29-2002, 06:17 AM
PQ ~ i agree with you that most african american men that are arrested are generally those in financial straights to begin with, thus, they wind up with public defenders who are overworked, underpaid, and often don't really care about seeing justice done, they just want the case off their desk.

as more and more hispanics move into the us, i bet we'll see the same trend there ~ these men are often indigent, sometimes illegal, and will end up in the same dire straights.

there is nothing like the system of INjustice......

ac