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7.12 Who Goes to Prison?

David Carter; Kate McLean; and Michelle Holcomb

Characteristics of Prison Populations

The types of people that end up in prison are quite different from individuals that go to jail. Almost all people that go to prisons in the United States are people that have been convicted of felony-level crimes and will be serving more than a year.

Pie graph indicating how many people are locked up in the United States
Individuals incarcerated in state and federal jails and prisons as of 2026. Consider the underlying offenses for individuals in Federal Prisons and Jails. (Prison Policy Initiative, CC-BY)

Focusing in on the left side of the graphic, there are roughly 1,090,000 State Prisoners. More than half (62%) are incarcerated for violent crimes. Property crimes and drug crimes represent the 2nd and 3rd most common offenses for the state prisoners. This graphic also shows us how many more individuals are in state versus federal institutions, with “only” 203,000 individuals incarcerated in the latter group. You may also notice how drug offenders are represented at a much higher level in federal institutions – over 42% of all federal inmates (versus 12% of all state inmates.)

Roughly 93% of prison inmates – compared to jail inmates – are male. In jail, that percentage is roughly 82% male. Across all detention facilities, there are stark racial disparities as well, as shown in the graph below and discussed further in subsequent chapters.

Bar graph indicating racial and ethnic populations of the U.S. generally to those in correctional facilities
Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Correctional Facilities (Prison Policy Initiative, CC-BY)

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Introduction to Criminal Justice Copyright © 2024 by LOUIS: The Louisiana Library Network is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.