Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑November 15th, 2019, 1:11 pm
There are many examples of countries where solutions other than imprisonment seem to work better in practice. Shouldn't we, who imprison so many of our citizens, look at the evidence-based achievements of others? And shouldn't we be trying out, or just adopting, those methods that work the best?
The trouble with international comparisons is that different countries have different demographics, different histories, differing dominant
weltanschauungen and are enforcing different laws. You're usually not comparing apples to apples, and so what works in one place will not necessarily work in another.
We could even take another step back, and wonder about our laws, and how we determine our actions if our laws are broken? A simple example: is it appropriate to imprison, or even punish, those who smoke weed? Never mind the actual issue; just consider whether what we currently do benefits our society? Could we act differently, and gain greater benefit still?
I certainly agree that no one should be punished for victimless crimes, such as drug use. But in deciding how to deal with real crimes we need to decide what are the goals sought. I take them to be two: 1) Reducing the losses and injuries inflicted by criminals, and 2) securing justice for the victims of crimes. Imprisonment, if properly applied, achieves the former, but does nothing to address the latter. And it doesn't even achieve the former when offenders with 3, 5, 10 previous convictions are released after serving a few months or a year or two in prison, as is typical in the US.