The Smart Justice 50-State Blueprints is the first-ever analysis of its kind and will serve as a tool for activists, advocates, and policymakers to push for transformational change to the criminal justice system. They are the result of a multi-year partnership between the ACLU, its state affiliates, and the Urban Institute to develop actionable policy options for each state that capture the nuance of local laws and sentencing practices.
The 51 reports (covering all 50 states and the District of Columbia) provide a snapshot of the tailored, localized approach that states must take to ending mass incarceration.
The reports are all viewable on an interactive website that allows users to visualize the reductions in jail and prison population that would result from the policy decisions that states pursue.
The interactive feature for North Carolina is viewable here: https://50stateblueprint.aclu.org/states/north-carolina
The North Carolina report provides an overview of North Carolina’s incarcerated populations, including an analysis of what drives people into the system, who is being sent to jail and prison and the racial disparities that are present, how long people spend behind bars, and why people are imprisoned for so long.
Our research found that an increase in the average amount of time people spend in prison, particularly for drug offenses, and a decrease in the number of people released from prison every year have kept the state’s prison population near peak levels, despite a reduction in the number of people entering the system in recent years. It also shows that Black men, people over the age of 50, and people with severe mental illness and substance use disorders are massively over-represented in the state’s prison population.
The findings in the North Carolina report cover:
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