Futurity

Listen: How the US can reduce mass incarceration

"The vast majority of folks I worked with in the jail needed something else than incarceration."

The revolving door of mass incarceration returning individuals to jail is “the definition of insanity,” according to Matt Epperson, especially for individuals suffering from mental illness and drug addiction who failed to receive the help they truly needed.

Epperson, associate professor in the School of Social Service Administration at the University of Chicago, has seen the failures of mass incarceration first hand. For more than two decades, Epperson worked with incarcerated individuals as a social worker, including six years in a county jail in Michigan.

“The vast majority of folks I worked with in the jail needed something else than incarceration,” Epperson says.

Epperson, along with a colleague from Washington University in St. Louis, leads the Smart Decarceration Initiative, a program utilizing the field of social work to apply policy and behavioral interventions to sustainably reduce the incarcerated population by nearly half.

On the first episode of the University of Chicago’s new podcast Knowledge Applied, Epperson discusses the history of mass incarceration, the challenges facing Smart Decarceration, and the social and political changes that have occurred over the last decade that may make this the ideal time to begin shrinking the US prison population.

The Knowledge Applied podcast is available on iTunes and Stitcher.

Source: Andrew Bauld for University of Chicago

The post Listen: How the US can reduce mass incarceration appeared first on Futurity.

More from Futurity

Futurity4 min read
What You Should Know About Rising Measles Cases
Cases of measles, a highly contagious and deadly disease, are surging in parts of the US, worrying doctors and public health experts. This year, so far, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), has recorded 64 cases, already more than th
Futurity3 min read
Shark Skin Inspiration Could Lead To Better Sonar Arrays
A new textured surface designed to mimic shark skin that can reduce drag and mitigate flow-based noise, potentially opens the door to a new generation of more effective and efficient towed sonar arrays. Submarines and ships rely on towed sonar arrays
Futurity1 min read
3 Answers On The EPA Plan To Fight ‘Forever Chemicals’ In Water
The US Environmental Protection Agency has imposed the first-ever regulations limiting chemicals known as PFAS, or forever chemicals, in drinking water. Long-term, low-dose exposure to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, also known as PFAS or foreve

Related Books & Audiobooks