PERSPECTIVE
Dr. Marc Howard is a professor of government and law and the founding director of the Prisons and Justice Initiative at Georgetown University. He received his BA in ethics, politics, and economics from Yale University, his MA and PhD in political science from the University of California, Berkeley, and his JD from Georgetown University.
After becoming a professor, Dr. Howard began visiting a childhood friend, Marty Tankleff, who was wrongfully convicted of killing his mother and attempting to kill his father, resulting in a sentence of 50 years to life in prison. These visits ended up changing the course of Dr. Howard’s life, as he dedicated himself to helping overturn Tankleff’s wrongful conviction, including going to law school to help his friend. Eventually, Tankleff was exonerated, which Dr. Howard describes as one of the best moments of his life.
Dr. Howard is also the founder and president of the Frederick Douglass Project for Justice, which aims to create a multi-state prison visitation program that enables people to visit local correctional facilities and engage in face-to-face conversations with the incarcerated, with the ultimate goal of driving meaningful personal and systemic change.
WHY ARE SO MANY AMERICANS INCARCERATED?
Dr. Howard addresses this question in his book,
Unusually Cruel: Prisons, Punishment, and the Real American Exceptionalism. He breaks down the answer into four main factors.
Race
We are all aware that a disproportionate number of Black Americans are incarcerated in the U.S., but do you know to what degree? While one in 17 white men in the U.S. will be imprisoned in their lifetime, one in three Black men will spend time behind bars.
A major driving force behind this vast disparity is racial profiling by police. Black individuals are far more likely than whites to be pulled over by the police while driving. They also are more likely to be detained, handcuffed, and searched. So it’s no surprise that studies show that Black people are arrested at a rate
five times higher than white people.
Once they are arrested, Black men are also more likely to be convicted, and once convicted, they are more likely to face stiff sentences than their white counterparts.
“The race issue has to do with the evolution from slavery to convict leasing to Jim Crow laws and then ultimately mass incarceration,” Dr. Howard said. (“
Convict leasing” refers to the post-Civil War system in which southern states leased prisoners to private railways, mines, and large plantations.)
“There have been long-standing attempts to keep African Americans down and subjugated in American history. Mass incarceration is the latest form of that.”
There is some good news, though.
Between 2000 to 2016, the ratio of Black offenders “under the supervision of criminal justice (in prison, in jail, on probation or on parole)” to white offenders shrank from 8.3-to-1 to 5.1-to-1, according to a
study by the Council on Criminal Justice.
There is no one cause behind this improvement, and even experts can only speculate about why. It could be partly due to the fact that the war on drugs has
shifted its focus from crack and marijuana to meth and opioids.
Regardless, the ratio is still nowhere near parity, but a marginal improvement. There is still a lot of work to do in the effort to dismantle systemic racism within our justice system.
Religion
Dr. Howard also highlights Christianity’s influence on our criminal justice system. In the U.S., areas with higher rates of incarceration overlap with places characterized by homogenous Christianity.
Research suggests that the type of religion that is most prevalent in an area impacts sentencing decisions. For example, one study found that judges in Georgia affiliated with conservative Protestant denominations were less likely to grant probation.
“[The element of] religion started in the 1970s when the evangelical movement became very politicized. Previously, religion was sort of a private sphere separate from politics, but it became very much part of politics as a result of Roe vs. Wade and other battles,” Dr. Howard said. “It then became this notion of ‘an eye for an eye.’”
Religious fundamentalists source their “tough on crime” ideals from the wrathful version of God portrayed in the Old Testament.
“If you think about Christianity and Jesus’ teachings, the message is so much more about love and support, but the way in which that message has come across in recent decades has been very, very harsh and punitive,” Dr. Howard said. “And it also overlaps with race because it’s especially white evangelicals who are the harshest on criminal justice issues.”
Politics
“The U.S. is the only country in the world that elects prosecutors and judges. It’s something that’s incomprehensible to other parts of the world,” Dr. Howard said. “Essentially, prosecutors and judges are political animals. They are raising funds, campaigning for a political party, trying to win elections, and running ads.”
In
recent years, it’s been shown that 50-60 percent of political donations for key judicial positions come from lawyers, lobbyists, and business interests.
“Normally, in other countries, it would be part of a separate judicial decision-making process, but in the U.S., it’s really very political,” Dr. Howard said.
In most other parts of the world, prosecutors and judges are appointed by an executive branch official. While some think of our electoral process of choosing prosecutors as democratic, it unfortunately contributes to our mass incarceration problem. This is because “tough on crime” policies are popular among voters—and prosecutors know it.
Prosecutors are nearly
10 percent more likely to take a case to trial instead of seeking a plea bargain in the year before they for reelection according to a
recent study. If the prosecutor is running in a contested election, the likelihood increases by another 15 percent.
Another study found that just before election time, judges sentenced defendants from 12 to 16 months longer.
Business
“The prison-industrial complex is an $85 billion a year business. At every stage, there are people making money off of a system that requires more and more people in prison and staying there. So it’s very hard to undo that system when it has such strong vested interests,” Dr. Howard said.
At least 37 states have legalized the contracting of prison labor by private corporations. There are
4,100 corporations engaged in the prison-industrial complex, some of which support prison labor directly through their supply chains—including IBM, Boeing, Motorola, Microsoft, AT&T, Dell, Honeywell, Intel, Nordstrom, Revlon, Macy’s, Target, and many more.
“Foodservice provides the equivalent of $4 billion of [prison] food annually. Private companies provide about half of the at least $12.3 billion spent on healthcare. Telephone companies, which can charge as much as $25 for a 15-minute call, rake in $1.3 billion,”
Insider reported.
These companies have a vested interest in keeping prisons full.
Over the last 10 years, the private prison industry has spent $64 million lobbying our elected officials for longer sentences, stricter laws, and tougher enforcement.