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Mashup Score: 0Assessing mass incarceration’s effects on families - 3 year(s) ago
In this Review, we assess how mass incarceration, a monumental American policy experiment, has affected families over the past five decades. We reach four conclusions. First, family member incarcer…
Source: ScienceCategories: Future of Medicine, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 15Analyzing mass incarceration - 3 year(s) ago
With almost 2 million people in confinement, the United States locks up more people per capita than any other nation. Understanding the reasons and then forging a path to reduce mass incarceration in America will require better research and analyses of …
Source: ScienceCategories: Future of Medicine, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 47The predatory dimensions of criminal justice - 3 year(s) ago
Over the past 35 years, public and private actors have turned US criminal justice institutions into a vast network of revenue-generating operations. Today, practices such as fines, fees, forfeiture…
Source: ScienceCategories: Future of Medicine, Latest HeadlinesTweet-
A new #ScienceReview illustrates how public & private groups have turned U.S criminal justice institutions into a vast network of revenue-generating operations, which include collection of fines, fees, forfeitures, prison charges, & bail https://t.co/0nGq3OveEM #CriminalInjustice https://t.co/03snCs4p7Z
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Mashup Score: 42Assessing mass incarceration’s effects on families - 3 year(s) ago
In this Review, we assess how mass incarceration, a monumental American policy experiment, has affected families over the past five decades. We reach four conclusions. First, family member incarcer…
Source: ScienceCategories: Future of Medicine, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 12Analyzing mass incarceration - 3 year(s) ago
With almost 2 million people in confinement, the United States locks up more people per capita than any other nation. Understanding the reasons and then forging a path to reduce mass incarceration in America will require better research and analyses of …
Source: ScienceCategories: Future of Medicine, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 4An outlier of injustice - 3 year(s) ago
FREE ACCESSIntroduction to Special IssueFROM THE ILLUSTRATOR: In this apartment windows scene, three different families share the same building. Those on the top and bottom floors enjoy their time and freedom together, whereas the scene in the middle set of windows, blocked by jail bars, represents how the family with incarcerated loved ones is affected in its own form of isolation. Unlike the…
Source: ScienceCategories: Future of Medicine, Latest HeadlinesTweet-
A new special issue of Science examines social science research on the state of mass incarceration in the US: its origin and expansion, its far-reaching effects on families and communities, and why the public tolerates and encourages it. https://t.co/hkNbrSwpwG #CriminalInjustice https://t.co/PVe1IxP9qc
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Mashup Score: 49The predatory dimensions of criminal justice - 3 year(s) ago
Over the past 35 years, public and private actors have turned US criminal justice institutions into a vast network of revenue-generating operations. Today, practices such as fines, fees, forfeiture…
Source: ScienceCategories: Future of Medicine, Latest HeadlinesTweet-
A new #ScienceReview illustrates how public & private groups have turned U.S criminal justice institutions into a vast network of revenue-generating operations, which include collection of fines, fees, forfeitures, prison charges, & bail https://t.co/0nGq3OveEM #CriminalInjustice https://t.co/WcxkeQPhup
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Assessing mass incarceration’s effects on families: A new #ScienceReview investigates how mass incarceration, a monumental American policy experiment, has affected families over the past five decades. https://t.co/VZl3ZtYjUu #CriminalInjustice https://t.co/3l5TuPOJdU