Maybe it's time to rethink our penal system.

Big House

The American penal system assumes that being imprisoned is bad enough to deter people convicted of a crime from breaking the law again. But there's new evidence that prison time doesn’t deter future crimes nearly as well as people tend to assume.

That's the result of a study published Monday in the journal Nature Human Behavior. In it, a team of scientists from across the country analyzed 111,110 felons' cases and discovered that there was no correlation between having served a prison sentence and committing more crimes later on.

The revelation that serving a prison sentence doesn't actually deter crime could mean that the U.S. correctional system, in which privately-owned prisons are booming, could be ripe for an overhaul.

Short Term

The researchers did notice a dip in repeat offenses after people were sentenced for a first conviction. Notably, repeat offenses dropped by nearly ten percent among people who were sent to prison compared to people who were given probation.

However, that drop only exists while people were still imprisoned for their first offence — they couldn't be sentenced for a second violent crime because they were still locked up for the first one.

Given that operating prisons is more of a financial burden on the state than putting people on probation, the researchers behind this study suggest that it may be time to change how America treats its criminals.

READ MORE: Does being tough on crime actually deter crime? [Ars Technica]

More on prisons: Prisons Are Replacing Visits With Expensive, Grainy Video Calls


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