Who is the Colorado Criminal Justice Reform Coalition?

Our mission is to reverse the trend of mass incarceration in Colorado. We are a coalition of nearly 7,000 individual members and over 100 faith and community organizations who have united to stop perpetual prison expansion in Colorado through policy and sentence reform.

Our chief areas of interest include drug policy reform, women in prison, racial injustice, the impact of incarceration on children and families, the problems associated with re-entry and stopping the practice of using private prisons in our state.

If you would like to be involved please go to our website and become a member.


Sunday, July 10, 2011

Let convicts choose: Prison or the lash? - The Boston Globe

Let convicts choose: Prison or the lash? - The Boston Globe
BOUT 15 years ago, I wrote a column - “Bring back flogging’’ - that called for reviving corporal punishment for convicted criminals. Rather than continuing to lock up millions of offenders, many of them nonviolent, in crowded and brutal prisons, I suggested, it would be more humane to punish at least some of them with a straightforward whipping and let them get on with their lives. Americans have been taught to think of flogging as hopelessly barbaric. But is corporal punishment really less civilized than a criminal-justice system that relies almost exclusively on caging human beings?

It was a pretty good column, and I always had a hunch it would make an even better book. Now it has, and I only wish I had written it.

Peter Moskos, a criminologist at the City University of New York and a former Baltimore police officer, has just published “In Defense of Flogging,’’ a serious if startling proposal to drastically shrink America’s “massive and horrible system of incarceration’’ by letting most convicted criminals choose between going to prison and a semi-public flogging with a rattan cane. An absurd thesis? Don’t reject it out of hand, Moskos says, before considering what you would want for yourself. “Given the choice between five years in prison and 10 brutal lashes, which would you choose?’’ A flogging would be intensely painful and bloody, but it would be over in a few minutes. Prison would mean losing years of your life, being locked away from everything and everyone you care about.

Offered those alternatives - hard time or the lash - most people would choose the lash. Better the short, sharp humiliation of a flogging than the prolonged emotional torture of being shut in a cage. Better to be punished and be done with it.

Despite its title, “In Defense of Flogging’’ is less a brief for the resumption of corporal punishment than an indictment of America’s system of mass imprisonment.

The United States locks up people at a rate unmatched anywhere. There are 2.3 million people behind bars in this country - more than the populations of Boston, Baltimore, and San Francisco combined. Both in raw numbers and as a percentage of the whole, the United States has more prisoners than any other country. With an incarceration rate of 756 inmates per 100,000 residents, America outjails not only every advanced democracy - in Canada and Western Europe, the rate of imprisonment is about one-seventh what it is here - but even the world’s dictatorships and autocracies. In Russia, the incarceration rate is 629 per 100,000. In Cuba, it’s 530. In Iran, it’s 220.

Are Americans safer because so many of their fellow citizens are behind bars? That’s far from clear. “From 1970 to 1991 crime rose while we locked up a million more people,’’ Moskos writes. “Since then we’ve locked up another million and crime has gone down.’’ Was it only the second million who were the “real’’ criminals?

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