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The Pros And Cons Of Return To Prison

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people from the police to First Lady Nancy Reagan. Well it wasn’t that easy, as our nation went through this gigantic prison transformation period ever experienced by any country. It wasn’t that easy to just say no to drugs and deterrence wasn’t that easy to curb the tide of drug use either. Knowing that, if caught with drugs or committing other crimes, that aberrant person would go to prison, however, getting caught was the aspect that many times didn’t happen right away if at all. Prison wasn’t that big of a deterrent because it wasn’t an immediate action, there was long periods of time between the action and the punishment, that wasn’t enough of a preventive method to stop the criminal activity “criminal propensities overpower temporary worries about punishment” (Cullen F. T., 2017, p. 87). These aberrant people had this proclivity to commit crimes of different natures and return to prison once they have been caught, no deterrence to worry about because the crime they committed was pleasurable for them at the time the crime was committed. RESEARCH ON COMMUNITY CONTROL: …show more content…

When compared to doing nothing except warehousing convicted felons, yes incapacitation does in fact reduce crime, however, when compared to an alternative correctional intervention program, incapacitation have a negative effect on crime “criminal activities decline when offenders are placed on probation versus no intervention at all (Cullen F. T., 2017, p. 142). The incapacitation effect is a difficult condition to predict. On the one hand incapacitating a criminal would prevent future crimes if the criminal spends long periods of time incarcerated beyond the crime committing years. However, on the other hand when the prison population get to an overcrowding level the incapacitation effect reduces and it is no longer cost efficient to continue to increase the prison

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