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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 10 page paper. Recidivism rates are very high in this country and they are highest for African-American and Hispanic males. This essay reports the data for these issues. It also reports information related to recidivism rates, such as demographics and programs that have reduced these rates. Statistical data included. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: ME12_PGrcdvsb.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
returning to prison within three years of their release. Most criminals commit the same type of crime again and again. State and federal prisons are overcrowded. This is primarily
due to the harsher sentencing mandates adopted by the federal government as well as state governments in the 1970s and 1980s. Some states, like California, have a type of three
strikes and youre out policy, which means that it does not matter what the third offense it, the offender is put away for life or nearly for life. These harsher
laws increased prison population multi-fold. Minorities commit a disproportionate amount of crime. Obviously, there are more minorities in prison than whites but the difference is not that much when one
knows the statistics. Most blacks in prison dropped out of high school and the recidivism rate among Blacks is higher than among whites. This essay discusses the issue of recidivism.
The essay includes demographic data as well as data related to prisoners and recidivism rates. Recidivism Information There area approximately 2.3 million people in prison in
the United States; thats about 738 prisoners for every 100,000 Americans (Gerhardstein, 2009). Half of these people were convicted of nonviolent crimes. About 500,000 have been convicted of drug offenses
(Taylor, 2009). Most of the prisoners are from poor backgrounds and most have little education (Taylor, 2009). There are seven times more prisoners today than there was in 1972 and
multiple times as many per capita as any other Western nation in the world (Taylor, 2009; Gerhardstein, 2009). This author argues that the numbers of people in prison has not
made the streets any safer for law-abiding citizens (Taylor, 2009). Gerhardstein (2009) reported that while there are seven times more people in prison, violent crime rates in New York and
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