The Prison Bust: Declining Carceral Capacity in an Era of Mass Incarceration

Harris, Jacob, Kaitlyn M. Sims, John M. Eason, Louis Chuang, Victoria Ylizaliturri, Isabel Anadón, and Erin Eife. 2023. "The Prison Bust: Declining carceral capacity in an era of mass incarceration." Punishment & Society.

53 Pages Posted: 20 Jul 2023 Last revised: 27 Mar 2024

See all articles by Jacob Harris

Jacob Harris

Cornell University

Kaitlyn Sims

University of Denver - Josef Korbel School of International Studies

John Eason

Brown University - Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs

Louis Chuang

Cornell University - Department of Government

Victoria Ylizaliturri

University of Wisconsin - Madison - Department of Political Science

Isabel Anadon

State University of New York (SUNY) - University at Buffalo, Department of Sociology

Erin Eife

Brown University - Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs

Date Written: July 11, 2023

Abstract

While there is a growing literature investigating the causes and consequences of the US prison boom—the tripling of prison facilities between 1970 and 2000—much less is known about current patterns of prison closures. We use novel data capturing the universe of prison closures (N=188) from 2000 to 2022 to identify and characterize what we term “the prison bust”—the period since 2000 when prison closures began to climb and eventually eclipse new prison building. We show that the prison bust is, in part, a consequence of development-oriented prison-building policies that aggressively used prisons to stimulate struggling local economies. The bust is primarily concentrated in the counties that pursued prison building most aggressively, reflecting a highly cyclical and reactionary pattern of prison placement and closure. We also show that, relative to counties with at least one prison but no closures, closures are concentrated in metro counties with stronger local economies and multiple prisons. Overall, we highlight the prison bust as an important new era in the history of US punishment and provide a new dataset for investigating its causes and consequences. We conclude by discussing the theoretical and policy implications of these findings.

Keywords: prison boom, prison bust, political economy, mass incarceration, rural, carceral capacity

Suggested Citation

Harris, Jacob and Sims, Kaitlyn and Eason, John and Chuang, Louis and Ylizaliturri, Victoria and Anadon, Isabel and Eife, Erin, The Prison Bust: Declining Carceral Capacity in an Era of Mass Incarceration (July 11, 2023). Harris, Jacob, Kaitlyn M. Sims, John M. Eason, Louis Chuang, Victoria Ylizaliturri, Isabel Anadón, and Erin Eife. 2023. "The Prison Bust: Declining carceral capacity in an era of mass incarceration." Punishment & Society., Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4506965 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4506965

Jacob Harris (Contact Author)

Cornell University ( email )

Ithaca, NY 14853
United States

Kaitlyn Sims

University of Denver - Josef Korbel School of International Studies ( email )

John Eason

Brown University - Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs ( email )

Louis Chuang

Cornell University - Department of Government ( email )

Victoria Ylizaliturri

University of Wisconsin - Madison - Department of Political Science

Isabel Anadon

State University of New York (SUNY) - University at Buffalo, Department of Sociology ( email )

Erin Eife

Brown University - Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs ( email )

111 Thayer Street
Box 1970
Providence, RI 02912-1970
United States

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