Related Resources
Our research focuses on reducing reliance on incarceration, rethinking spending, and prioritizing structural changes to better serve Californians.
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Report
Despite Reforms, Racial Disparities in California’s Prisons Remain Large
California adopted a series of justice system reforms in the 2010s that substantially reduced mass incarceration. Did these reforms also help to reduce long standing racial disparities in state prisons — disparities that reflect the disproportionate incarceration of Black and Latinx residents as well as other Californians of color? This report answers this question by examining changes in state-level incarceration during the 2010s for both men and women through the lens of race and ethnicity. While incarceration declined nearly across the board, by the end of the 2010s men and women of color generally continued to be incarcerated at higher rates than white men and women, and racial disparities generally widened.Justice System -
Report
Understanding Proposition 25
Across California and the United States, the push for bail reform has gained momentum with increasing awareness and research showing the disproportionate impact the money bail system has on people of color and low-income households. Enter Proposition 25 that will appear on the November 3, 2020 statewide ballot and asks California voters to decide whether a 2018 state law that effectively ends money bail should take effect. If voters approve Prop. 25, judges will be able to utilize risk-based assessment tools – examining population links between rearrest or reconviction and individual factors such as age, gender, or criminal record – to determine if individuals detained for certain crimes can be released before a court appearance rather than posting money bail.Ballot PropositionsJustice System -
Report
Criminal Justice Reform Is Working in California
Over many years, California lawmakers and voters adopted a series of harsh, one-size-fits-all sentencing laws that prioritized punishment over rehabilitation, led to severe overcrowding in state prisons, and disproportionately impacted Black and Latinx Californians – consequences that many families still feel today. California began reconsidering its “tough on crime” approach a little over a decade ago as prison overcrowding reached crisis proportions and the state faced lawsuits filed on behalf of incarcerated adults. Ultimately, a federal court in 2009 ordered California to reduce overcrowding to no more than 137.5% of the prison system’s capacity – an order that remains in effect today.Ballot PropositionsJustice System -
Report
California Spending on Law Enforcement, the Legal System & Incarceration
Recent acts of police brutality against Black Americans and greater public outcry over the continued abuse and deaths of people across Black communities have amplified calls for defunding, abolishing, and reimagining local policing. This also comes with growing understanding that police violence has disproportionately fatal consequences for Black men and women, and Black transgender women in particular.The calls to action involve significantly transforming the mission and structure of local law enforcement, divesting from local law enforcement in its current forms, and reinvesting the freed-up funding into community-building capacities that would also seek to end racial profiling and police brutality against Black people and other people of color.COVID-19Justice System -
Data Hit
California’s Prisons Remain Overcrowded During the COVID-19 Pandemic
As policymakers consider the state’s fiscal outlook, as well as the health of all Californians, it’s important to know that California spends more than $13 billion per year from the General Fund on state corrections. The cost per incarcerated adult at the state level is around $90,000 per year. Crisis or not, policymakers can better protect the health of incarcerated adults – over 70% of whom are Black or Latinx – and of prison staff by further reducing overcrowding and focusing on services that are proven to create safer communities.COVID-19Justice System -
Fact Sheet
Many Californians in Prisons and Jails Have Mental Health Needs
Prisons and jails have been turned into “America’s…new mental hospitals,” even though it is clear that correctional facilities are highly inappropriate places to house and treat people with mental illness. In this fact sheet learn why California must continue to improve health care for people who are incarcerated and why reforms are also needed to address the connections between mental health and the criminal justice system so that Californians who need mental health treatment receive the appropriate care in a timely manner rather than being confined in state prisons or county jails.Health & Safety NetJustice System
Get the Facts
State and local governments spend roughly $50 billion every year on local law enforcement, the criminal legal system, and incarceration in state prisons.
Roughly 1 in 3 people in state prisons receive mental health care.
Incarceration has declined substantially over the past decade, but men and women of color generally continue to be incarcerated at higher rates than white men and women.
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