Lifetime risk of imprisonment in the United States remains high and starkly unequal

Author:

Roehrkasse Alexander F.1ORCID,Wildeman Christopher23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology and Criminology, Butler University, 4600 Sunset Ave, Indianapolis, IN 46208, USA.

2. Department of Sociology, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708, USA.

3. ROCKWOOL Foundation Research Unit, 1472 Copenhagen, Denmark.

Abstract

How likely are U.S. males and females of different ethnoracial groups to be imprisoned over the course of their lives, and how have these risks changed in recent decades? Using survey and administrative data, we update 20th-century estimates of the cumulative risk of imprisonment for the 21st century. In 2016, non-Hispanic Black males’ lifetime risk of imprisonment remained very high—more than 16%—but decreased substantially relative to extreme levels of risk in the 1990s and early 2000s. The lifetime risk of imprisonment among people identifying as American Indian or Alaska Native was nearly 50% for males and more than 14% for females. Although national prison admission rates are declining, imprisonment remains a pervasive and highly unequal life-course experience.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference38 articles.

1. T. P. Bonczar A. J. Beck Lifetime Likelihood of Going to State or Federal Prison (Bureau of Justice Statistics Special Report NCJ-160092 1997).

2. T. P. Bonczar Prevalence of Imprisonment in the U.S. Population 1974–2001 (Bureau of Justice Statistics Special Report NCJ-197976 2003).

3. Mass Imprisonment and the Life Course: Race and Class Inequality in U.S. Incarceration

4. B. Western Punishment and Inequality in America (Russell Sage Foundation 2006).

5. Punishment's place: the local concentration of mass incarceration

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