Recidivism In Prison

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Pages: 3

I come from a family of “those red-neck friends.” I’m proud to say I have evolved passed some views held in my household. However, though taking this class I was able to open my eyes to a very real issue. The correctional system in the united states is broken. Harsh sentencing, privatized prisons, and high recidivism rates are only the tip of the iceberg, this is what the public sees. The treatment of the inmates is what we do not see, and is not talked about. Perhaps, you could justify poor treatment of inmates if it worked. But it does not work. As aforementioned, this is a broke system. Throughout this class I’ve realized that; prison is a cycle, a cycle that no person wants to go through, but somehow a system that no one can leave. We know it’s a cycle because that’s what the recidivism rates tell us. So, if the goal of jail and prison is for the inmates to “learn their lesson,” it is not working. …show more content…
But even then, is sexual assault, overcrowding, solitary confinement, and prison food that has nowhere near the needed daily caloric intake worth it for some low-level drug offender in prison to “learn his lesson?” I say no. For this paper, I’ve decided to focus on three mentalities surrounding corrections. The publics mentality, the “policy makers” mentality, and the inmantles mentality surrounding America’s correctional