Todd Clear, “The Beginning of the End of the Great Punishment Experiment (and what that means for mass incarceration)”

Thu, February 19, 2015
All Day
035 Psychology Building

Event Host: Criminal Justice Research Center


Todd Clear, professor, Rutgers University-Newark, lectures on “The Beginning of the End of the Great Punishment Experiment (and what that means for mass incarceration)”. Clear will be joined by expert panelists Dr. Townsand Price-Spratlen, associate professor, sociology, Ohio State, and Mr. Steve Van Dine, Bureau Chief, Bureau of Research and Evaluation, Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.

His abstract:
The prison population in the United States began to rise in 1972, and increased every year between 1972 and 2010, and by that time the number of prisoners was about 8 times what it was in 1972. In 2011, the national prison population dropped slightly for the first time in a generation. It has been on a slight decline since. This talk reviews the factors that fueled the almost 40-year growth in incarceration, and then assesses why prison populations are now showing evidence of slight decline. Whether this decline is a permanent change in the punitive landscape, or a temporary sift, is discussed. The talk concludes with a review of the what it would take to see a much larger change in true number of people behind bars.

Coffee, juice and refreshments will be served.

For more information, visit the Criminal Justice Reasearch Center website.