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PUSHING TOWARD PARITY

The disproportionate representation of people of color in the criminal justice system has received substantial scrutiny from researchers, the media, and others concerned that disparities reflect enduring, systemic race-based bias. Academic literature has produced numerous explanations for racial differences in criminal involvement, from the economic and social legacy of slavery and Jim Crow laws to contemporary discrimination in housing and education systems, bias by criminal justice decision-makers, and the effects of harsher sentencing policies adopted in the 1980s and ‘90s.

Disparities in imprisonment have narrowed over the past 20 years—and the Council on Criminal Justice launched the Pushing Toward Parity research series to find out why. To what extent is the criminal justice system reflecting or amplifying inequities in American society? How are different parts of the system working or not working to narrow the gaps? What policies and practices might accelerate progress?

The first two reports, in 2019 and 2022, assessed national-level trends in disparity in probation, parole, jail, and prison populations, crime-specific changes in imprisonment disparities, differences in disparity by race and sex, and changes in reported offending rates and decisions at the key stages of criminal justice case processing. New reports in 2024 assess the impact of sentencing reforms on disparity trends in 12 states, examine imprisonment trends among female populations, and explore challenges in measuring of Hispanic disparities.

Publications

Minimal Impact: Analyzing State Sentencing Reforms and Racial Disparities in Selected State Prison Populations

An analysis of more than 700 sentencing-related statutes adopted across 12 states between 2010 and 2020 found that the reforms had negligible impacts on reducing disparities in imprisonment. Instead, they largely codified earlier changes to enforcement, policing, charging, and sentencing practices.

Justice System Disparities: State-Specific Imprisonment Trends

Researchers took an in-depth look at disparity trends in imprisonment in 12 states–AZ, CA, CO, FL, GA, IL, NY, ND, PA, SC, TX, UT–as well as impacts the adoption of sentencing-related statutes may have had on those trends.

Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Female Imprisonment in the U.S.

An analysis of female imprisonment from 2000-2020 found large drops in disparity between Black and White women (-71%) and Hispanic and White women (-56%). By 2020, Hispanic women were less likely than White women to be in state prison.

The Measurement Divide: Analyzing Hispanic-White State Imprisonment Disparities in the U.S.

Examining imprisonment trends for Hispanic and White adults, researchers found that disparity declined from 2000 to 2020 but that the precise size of the drop is unclear because of a conflict in data and differences in how race and Hispanic ethnicity are measured.

Racial Disparities Art

Black-White National Imprisonment Trends

Although significant gaps remain, disparities between Black and White people narrowed at nearly every stage of the criminal justice process between 2016 and 2020. In some cases, the pace of the decline slowed; in others, the disparity gap closed entirely.

Trends in Correctional Control

From 2000 to 2016, racial and ethnic disparities declined across prison, jail, probation, and parole populations in the U.S. This report examines crime-specific changes in disparity in imprisonment rates, differences in disparity by race and sex, and other trends.

Project Contributors

Georgia State University

William J. Sabol

Thaddeus Johnson

Alexander Caccavale

Aislinn Wallace

Crime and Justice Institute

Leonard Engel

Jessie Halladay

Colleen Bogonovich

Vibha Honasoge

Shannon Mangram

Quentin Weld

Council on Criminal Justice

We are also grateful to James P. Lynch, Chair and Professor (emeritus) of the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of Maryland at College Park, for his contributions to the analysis of disparity trends in the imprisonment of Hispanic people.

The following advisers provided guidance but were not asked to endorse any findings or their presentation: Keith Humphreys, PhD, Charis Kubrin, PhD, Evelyn Patterson, PhD, Steven Raphael, PhD, Jennifer Skeem, PhD, and Bruce Western, PhD. We thank them for their contributions.

About The Art

The banner design was created by an adult in custody designer in the Oregon Corrections Enterprises (OCE) Graphic Design program. The mission of OCE, in partnership with the Oregon Department of Corrections, is to promote public safety by providing adults in custody with work and training opportunities in a self-sustaining organization.

Supporters

Reports from the Pushing Toward Parity project were produced with support from Arnold Ventures, the Ford Foundation, Georgia Power, Microsoft, and Southern Company Foundation, as well as the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, #StartSmall, and other CCJ general operating contributors.

coming soon:
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