The New York Times today published a shocking article about the number of women who are incarcerated and how that number has multiplied since the 1970s. It has also increased substantially for men, but not at the rate of women.

Wrap your mind around these numbers:


On Wednesday, the Vera Institute of Justice and a program called the Safety and Justice Challenge released a report that found that the number of women in local jails in the United States was almost 14 times what it was in the 1970s, a far higher growth rate than for men, although there remain far fewer women than men in jails and prisons.

The study found that the number of women held in the nation’s 3,200 municipal and county jails for misdemeanor crimes or who are awaiting trial or sentencing had increased significantly — to about 110,000 in 2014 from fewer than 8,000 in 1970.

(Over all, the nation’s jail population increased to 745,000 in 2014 from 157,000 in 1970.)

Much of the increase in the number of jailed women occurred in counties with fewer than 250,000 people, according to the study, places where just 1,700 women had been incarcerated in 1970. By 2014, however, that number had surged to 51,600, the report said.

Poverty? Hopelessness? Overzealous prosecution?

Lest we forget, many prisons have been privatized, and the one thing that correction corporations don’t like is an empty cell (more on that in a post in a day or so). How much of the increase in incarcerations has been driven by the need to lift profit margins?

Criminal justice reform is intimately related to education. Children without a mother, children without a father, are children who suffer. Surely there must be alternatives to prison that would be beneficial to the individuals involved and would not destroy families and lives.