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More Prisons? Dumb Idea

Jim Sinclair - The Tyee VIA StopLying.ca
July 31, 2006

Canada More prisons, more prisoners, more time behind bars, and of course, more millions to make all this come true. Yet as Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his Justice Minister Vic Toews rush to embrace this U.S.-style get-tough-on-crime agenda, millions of Canadians are rightly asking the tough question: where in the world has this strategy worked?

Does diverting money from already strapped social programs, education and health care to build prisons and fill the courts really provide a safe and decent place for Canadians to call home? The great tough-on-crime policy has its birth in the United States, which leads the world in throwing people in jail. In 1972, the United States had about 300,000 Americans behind bars, but following decades of political posturing for longer and mandatory sentences, the number has climbed to a world record of 2.2 million prisoners. It's not cheap either. The country now spends $58 billion per year, up from $8 billion in 1982. For African Americans, the number of prisoners are staggering. Between 1980 and 2000, there were three times as many African Americans in jail as there were in college.

How out of line is the United States with the rest of the world? With only five per cent of the world's population within its borders, the United States had 20 per cent of the world's prisoners. In comparative terms, the latest figures show that for every 100,000 citizens, the United States has 724 citizens doing time. Yet, despite a dramatic leap in prison population, there is no drop in the number of Americans who are afraid to walk near their homes after dark.

Stockholm should be dangerous

Let's turn the "getting tough on crime" theory on its head. The country with the lowest prison population per capita is Iceland, with 37 prisoners per 100,000 citizens. Sweden has 75, Denmark has 72 and Finland has 71 per 100,000. Here at home in Canada, we have 116 per 100,000. Using Stephen's Harper's right-wing logic, the United States would have to be the safest place on the planet whereas poor old Iceland, followed closely by the Scandinavian countries, must be really dangerous because, after all, their criminals must be running around free. Here, in Canada, we'd be safer than most of these folks but still a long way from the safe streets of America.

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