Structure of Mass Incarceration
Decision-Making in the Criminal Justice System
Punishment, Bias, and Structural Inequality
Community Impact and Reincarceration Cycle
100

What are the three stages of mass incarceration?


Roundup, conviction, and invisible punishment


100

What is police discretion?


The power police have to decide who to stop, search, or arrest


100

What does the drunk driving vs drug punishment comparison show?



Punishment is not always based on harm



100

Why do many people return to the same neighborhoods after release?


Lack of resources and support elsewhere


200

What happens during the “roundup” stage?


Targeted policing and arrests in certain communities


200

Why do plea deals dominate the system?


Because most people avoid trial due to risk of harsher punishment


200

What is meant by “punishment depends on who you are”?


 Race and class influence how laws are enforced


200

How do parole and probation rules lead to reincarceration?


Strict rules cause violations that send people back to prison


300

How do plea deals affect the conviction stage?


They push people through the system quickly without trial


300

How do prosecutors influence outcomes?


They control charges and plea deals which shape sentences


300

What is the “fork in the road” idea?


Early decisions determine who enters the system


300

What is the incarceration cycle?


Prison → release → violations → return to prison


400

What is “invisible punishment”?


Long-term consequences after release like losing jobs or housing


400

What is a consent search and why is it controversial?


A search someone agrees to but often feels pressured to allow


400

How did the War on Drugs contribute to inequality?


 It targeted specific communities more heavily


400

How does incarceration affect families and communities?


A: It creates instability and long-term harm


500

Why is mass incarceration described as a system not just prisons?


Because it starts before charges and continues after release


500

Why do decisions at early stages matter so much?


They determine who moves deeper into the system


500

Why does police focus matter more than behavior?


Because enforcement patterns shape who gets punished


500

Why does the cycle increase policing in certain areas?


A: Instability leads to more surveillance and enforcement