Phelps Michelle S
Dept. of Sociology, University of Minnesota.
Punishm Soc. 2017 Jan;19(1):53-73. doi: 10.1177/1462474516649174. Epub 2016 May 10.
Scholarship on the expansion of the U.S. carceral state has primarily focused on imprisonment rates. Yet the majority of adults under formal criminal justice control are on probation, an "alternative" form of supervision. This article develops the concept of and builds a typology of state control regimes that theorizes both the scale and type of punishment states employ. Drawing on Bureau of Justice Statistics data from 1980 and 2010, I analyze whether mass probation developed in the same places, affecting the same demographic groups and driven by the same criminal justice trends, as mass imprisonment. The results show that mass probation was a unique state development, expanding in unusual places like Minnesota and Washington. The conclusions argue for a reimagining of the causes and consequences of the carceral state to incorporate the expansion of probation.
关于美国监禁国家扩张的学术研究主要集中在监禁率上。然而,在正式刑事司法控制下的大多数成年人都处于缓刑期,这是一种“替代”监督形式。本文提出了国家控制制度的概念并构建了一种类型学,对国家采用的惩罚规模和类型进行理论化。利用1980年和2010年司法统计局的数据,我分析了大规模缓刑是否在与大规模监禁相同的地方发展,影响相同的人口群体,并受相同的刑事司法趋势驱动。结果表明,大规模缓刑是一种独特的国家发展现象,在明尼苏达州和华盛顿州等不同寻常的地方有所扩张。结论主张重新思考监禁国家的成因和后果,以纳入缓刑的扩张情况。