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Marian Wright Edelman

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Ending the Cradle to Prison PipelineTM and Mass Incarceration -- the New American Jim Crow

Posted: 07/06/2012 5:04 pm

A black boy born in 2001 has a one in three chance of going to prison in his lifetime and a Latino boy a one in six chance of the same fate. The U.S. has the highest incarceration rate in the world: 7.1 million adult residents -- one in 33 -- are under some form of correctional supervision including prison, jail, probation, or parole. Michelle Alexander writes in her bestselling book The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness that there are more adult African Americans under correctional control today than were enslaved in 1850, a decade before the Civil War began. In 2011, our state and federal prison population exceeded that of the top 35 European nations combined. Something’s very wrong with this picture.

The numbers are frightening -- and there’s more. That’s why the Children’s Defense Fund will focus on this unjust crisis in one of the main plenary sessions at our national conference in Cincinnati on July 24th. This epidemic of mass incarceration has created one of the most dangerous crises for the black community since slavery and affects everyone in our nation. Black males have an imprisonment rate nearly seven times higher than white males, and Hispanic males have an imprisonment rate over twice that of white males.

Mass incarceration is tearing fathers and mothers from children, and economically and politically disempowering millions by taking away the right to vote and ability to get a job and public benefits, in some states, after prison terms are served. One in nine black, one in 28 Hispanic and one in 57 white children have an incarcerated parent.

Mass incarceration has also become a powerful economic force and drain on taxpayers. Annual state spending on corrections tops $51 billion and states spend on average two and a half times more per prisoner than per public school pupil. I think this is a very dumb investment policy. Federal spending on prisons totaled $6.6 billion in fiscal year 2012. An added danger driving mass incarceration is the privatization of prisons for profit. The Corrections Corporation of America, the largest private prison corporation, has proposed to 48 state governors that it will operate their prison systems for 20 years with a guaranteed 90 percent occupancy rate. A majority of all those incarcerated have committed nonviolent offenses. Some young prisoners I recently visited are in prison for use or possession of marijuana.

The toxic cocktail of poverty, racial disparities in child serving systems, poor education, zero tolerance school discipline policies, racial profiling, unbridled prosecutorial discretion, and racial disparities in arrests and sentencing are funneling millions of young and older poor people of color, especially males, into dead end, powerless and hopeless lives. So we are bringing an extraordinary group of experts together at our national conference to talk about how to halt the epidemic and get our nation back on course and our children into a pipeline to college and productive work.

The panel will be moderated by Charles Ogletree, Jesse Climenko Professor at Harvard Law School and Founder and Executive Director of Harvard’s Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice. The panelists are legal scholar Michelle Alexander, the author of The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Color Blindness; Elaine Jones, former Director-Counsel, NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc., and chair of CDF’s strategic planning committee on mass incarceration and the privatization of prisons; the Honorable Patricia Martin, Presiding Judge, Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois Child Protection Division and President of the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges; the Honorable Michael A. Nutter, Mayor of Philadelphia and incoming chair of the U.S. Conference of Mayors; Dr. John Rich, professor and chair of Health Management & Policy and Co-Director of the Center for Nonviolence and Social Justice at Drexel University School of Public Health; and Bryan Stevenson, Executive Director of Equal Justice Initiative, who successfully argued the recent cases before the U.S. Supreme Court ending mandatory sentences of life in prison without parole for juveniles. They’ll share their thoughtful research and experience about how to better ensure public safety through prevention and early intervention and fairer law enforcement policies. They’ll also examine mass incarceration as a continuing method of racial control and discrimination and recommend measures to replace the Cradle to School to Prison PipelineTM with one to college and productive work.

The panel will lead into an interactive town hall discussion with added speakers, including formerly incarcerated participants, to focus on how we can close off the major feeder systems fueling the Cradle to Prison Pipeline and mass incarceration and create new hope and opportunity for children in their place. It will be a critical chance to hear from leading experts, identify how we’ve reached this point, and determine how together we must build a focused, effective movement to say no more.

Join us in Cincinnati to learn more and add your voice. It’s time to reroute our children, youths, and parents from prison to college and productive work. And it’s way past time to stop the uniquely American blight of mass incarceration permanently.

 

Follow Marian Wright Edelman on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ChildDefender

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A black boy born in 2001 has a one in three chance of going to prison in his lifetime and a Latino boy a one in six chance of the same fate. The U.S. has the highest incarceration rate in the world: 7...
A black boy born in 2001 has a one in three chance of going to prison in his lifetime and a Latino boy a one in six chance of the same fate. The U.S. has the highest incarceration rate in the world: 7...
 
 
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05:15 PM on 07/20/2012
We need more coverage on the impact of incarceration on families and challenges of re-entry. Check out the series: Lessening the Impact of Incarceration on Oakland: http://oaklandlocal.com/content/getting-out-staying-out-oakland-local-investigative-series-prison-incarceration-and-reentry
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Mr Bobo
Punk Rock Libertarian. Different. Better.
04:56 PM on 07/10/2012
I think socio-economics, cultural mores and parental involvement (or lack thereof) are the problem, mass incarceration is just the logical end result.
12:00 PM on 07/10/2012
It's well known that crime statistics have a bias towards blacks - obviously the numbers are conspiring against them to keep them down. Never mind the fact that most violent crimes are committed by black offenders, we should probably just drop them out on the street to get back to committing these violent crimes.
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SF TKF
Cthulhu thinks you'd make a nice sandwich.
02:57 PM on 07/09/2012
It’s a toxic cocktail alright, but it’s made of a culture that values flash over substance, easy money (drugs and sports) over hard work and education, and equates manliness with violence and irresponsible sexual activity. And I say this a mixed race woman living in Oakland, CA. I see it up close and in person every day.
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08:37 AM on 07/09/2012
Read this report for more information about why private prison companies are a bad idea:
Gaming the System: How the Political Strategies of Private Prison Companies Promote Ineffective Incarceration Policies
http://www.justicepolicy.org/research/2614

And here are statistics on these private prison companies, including the millions they spend lobbying against the public interest and for their own bottom line:
http://www.propublica.org/article/by-the-numbers-the-u.s.s-growing-for-profit-detention-industry
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Linda Tew
I believe in working for what you receive!
02:35 AM on 07/09/2012
I read this article and I have read the comments and in a way it is funny both the article and the posts.
First off a majority of "all" races going to prison isn't because of pot. In NY median age 34 (old enough to know better), only 9% was drug related only arrests, 49% black, 47% hispanic, 4% white. pot sales .6% other controlled substance 99.4%, following breakdown of arrests no NYS criminal history 7.6%, Drug only 8.8%, mixed history 83.7%. So if the median age is 34 and most involve controlled substance with other violent crimes, how is this about pot? Isn't it also about personal choice? If you don't want to go to prison, don't commit a crime. Freedom of choice simple as that and it isn't everyone elses responsibility to have to suffer because of the choices they make. More money for more government programs. Enough already
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08:45 AM on 07/09/2012
Can you give a link to your statistics source?
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Linda Tew
I believe in working for what you receive!
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08:48 AM on 07/09/2012
I find your statistics hard to square with FBI statistics that say (nationwide):
"The highest arrest counts among the Part I and Part II offenses were for drug abuse violations (estimated at 1,663,582 arrests)."
http://www2.fbi.gov/ucr/cius2009/arrests/index.html
11:57 PM on 07/08/2012
As far as cause, Ms. Adelman's quote says it all "The toxic cocktail of poverty, racial disparities in child serving systems, poor education, zero tolerance school discipline policies, racial profiling, unbridled prosecutorial discretion, and racial disparities in arrests and sentencing are funneling millions of young and older poor people of color, especially males, into dead end, powerless and hopeless lives." We can spend millions on superpacs, wars, give billions to the bail out of banks and industries (it was a good thing to save the jobs not in fault that came with them) but what about good job training programs for all? Since these institutions suppose to be correctional institutions with taxpayer dollars, when a person gets out he/she should have mandatory education/skills/rehabilitation and ready to be a productive citizen, if not, the institution has failed and it should be penalized. If these things are not done then the term "correctional institution" is a lie. What about "no prisoner left behind". I'm talking about prisoners who will eventually be released.
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Vince Almaraz
03:11 PM on 07/09/2012
They are throwing more money at these areas than ever before. What makes you think throwing even more will make any difference. People have to want to change.
11:56 PM on 07/08/2012
Marian Edelman always wants to divide people on race and keep us apart. She is a perfect tool for the 1%. If you look at California you will find that the largest and most powerful union is the prison guard's union. They are the ones who wanted these harsh punishments. And of course the Democrats who are partly owned by the big government unions supported these laws.

This is about big government and big corporate power against US workers. These are the same people who supported offshoring (free trade which BOTH parties support), work visas, and illegals. Obama supports free trade, he supports work visas, and he supports amnesty for illegals. Obama's job's bill is more free trade and more spending on government unions like the prison guards.

So wake up people. The real battle is against the 1%. And Democrats and Republicans are BOTH owned by the 1%.
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10:55 AM on 07/09/2012
I think Greece is waiting for you...
grnhrnt54
truth is neither left or right
10:45 PM on 07/08/2012
The Problem begins at home whether it is one parent or two. Someone has to care and see that the child is supported and given the opportunity to succeed. I don't know how you get a parent to care but, that is the solution to the problem. If you want to know the names of the children in danger of wasting their lives all you have to do is visit the local elementary school and talk to the teacher.
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Kate Perez
10:29 PM on 07/08/2012
I am a middle-aged, church-going lady who never uses illegal drugs, nor do I have a desire to. However, I read "The Pot Book" because I was interested in the role of Cannabis in treatment of illnesses, use as a super-cheap bio-fuel, and the way our hysteria about it has warped our political system and fueled the Mexican border gang wars and our prison spending. What an eye-opener! The truth about this plant is really incredible, both it's amazing benefits and the horrible consequences of criminalizing it. Our founding fathers grew it and praised it in lofty terms, on the record. No one should go to jail for growing this or possessing it if they have committed no other crime in conjunction.
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UrbanAddictiondotcom
Living and Loving Life
10:28 PM on 07/08/2012
This system likes to "hold" people at will. People who have no means to flee or hide. While holding them for trial they are profiting off their snacks, clothing, and phone calls. There is no justice for people who can't pay for it.
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HEXYEBO
What time is it ? Same as usual
09:39 PM on 07/08/2012
"Black males have an imprisonment rate nearly seven times higher than white males."

Two main factors--African-American culture and prevalence of low socio-economic status.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
09:38 PM on 07/08/2012
NOW do you believe pot prohibition is a crime against humanity?
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HEXYEBO
What time is it ? Same as usual
09:36 PM on 07/08/2012
Waiting for African American community to take responsibility for catastrophic failure to raise that boy properly and failure to provide the culture of respect towards learning, decent role models and respect for other ethnic communities.