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Gov. Jerry Brown this month signed Assembly Bill 109, historic legislation that will enable California to close the revolving door of low-level inmates cycling in and out of our expensive state-prison system. The bill shifts key responsibilities and funding to counties, which can more effectively sanction - and rehabilitate - offenders.
For too long, California's prison system has outpaced the nation in spending, recidivism and overcrowding - and has had an antiquated parole system. We have paid an unsustainable premium for returning low-level parolees to prison and for doing much at the state level that should be done locally.
California spends nearly $9 billion on corrections annually, or about $50,000 per prisoner (the national average is $23,000).
Other publications by this author
- Justice by Other Means: Venue Sorting in Parole Revocation
- Oxford Handbook of Sentencing and Corrections
- Remembering James Q. Wilson
- Putting Science to Work: How the Principles
- Implementing Rehabilitation Principles to Promote Prisoner Re-entry
- Parole and Prisoner Re-entry
- Supervision Regimes and Parolee Deviance: Official Reactions to Parole Violations in California
- Community Corrections: Probation, Parole, and Prisoner Reentry
- Crime and Public Policy
- Beyond the Prison Bubble
Author
- Joan Petersilia
- Stanford Law School
- petersilia@law.stanford.edu
- 650 723-4740