The University and Mass Incarceration

The rate of incarceration has more than quadrupled in the last four decades. Between 1973 and 2009, the number of people incarcerated in federal and state prisons increased from approximately 200,000 to 1.5 million with another 700,000 held in local jails. This unprecedented level of incarceration is severely racialized: 60 percent of the prison population is black and Latino. Universities have played a complex role vis-à-vis this social crisis. On the one hand, university research developed and endorsed the policies that have contributed to mass incarceration, they have themselves been involved in criminalization of surrounding neighborhood, and have benefited from endowments investments in private prisons. On the other hand, due to the efforts of faculty and students, universities have also hosted and supported the growing critical scholarship on incarceration and have pioneered prison education programs.

The crisis of mass incarceration reaches far beyond the domain of higher education, but universities can play an important role in rectifying this injustice.