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Just released! Closing California’s Division of Juvenile Facilities: An Analysis of County Institutional Capacity by the Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice’s Daniel Macallair, MPA, Executive Director Mike Males, PhD, Senior Research Fellow and Catherine McCracken, M.S., Program Director Read the full report at Also check out More calls for California to shut down its youth prison system ” by Karen de Sá of the Mercury News.

I stated in Part I of this blog that the prison system is functional” in that it benefits some segments of the population. One obvious segment it benefits is all of those who work inside. Indeed, with $68 billion in annual expenditures on the American prison system plus strong unions in many states you have a very strong vested interest in keeping the prison a going concern (the reforms” would serve mostly to make working conditions and pay and benefits much better). Then too we have all…

Senator Jim Webb, an outspoken critic of America’s prison system, has argued that we need to fix our prisons” (Parade Magazine ), I would like to offer a different perspective and pose the following question: Do we really need to fix” or reform” the prison? I ask this question for many different reasons, not the least of which is the obvious fact that despite the overwhelming evidence that prisons have not been a big factor in reducing crime (note that not only does the US have the highest…

I came across this article in the Corpus Christi paper about two teenage taggers who were arrested for a vandalism spree.” For these crimes they were placed in a juvenile hall for three weeks and then released on house arrest with electronic monitoring. This presents a good example of why the United States leads the world in youth and adult incarceration. When will be learn that incarcerating children for minor crimes does not make them better citizens. Incarceration is for…

As strange as its sounds, American history repeatedly shows that legalization of certain drugs leads to expanded, not reduced, wars on drugs”: In the late 1800s, the crisis of middle-Americans’ addiction to new, legal patent medicines saturated with opiates, cocaine, and alcohol was buried under vicious official crusades vilifying the Chinese and opium and black men and cocaine. After the repeal of Prohibition in 1933, the explosion in drunk driving and abuse of newly legalized alcohol by…