Mass incarceration in America, explained in 22 maps and charts
America is number one — in incarceration. Over the past several decades, the country has built the largest prison population in the entire world, with the second-highest prison population per capita behind the tiny African country of Seychelles. But how did it get this way? Although it may be easy to blame one specific event, the US's path to incarceration was decades in the making — involving politicians as varied as Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and Bill Clinton.
I. America is now the world's leader in incarceration
The US leads the world in incarceration
Although the US makes up about 4 percent of the world's population, it accounts for 22 percent of the world's prison population. The US is not only out of line with its developed peers, but also authoritarian nations like Cuba, Russia, and China.
Part of the reason for America's high levels of incarceration is the country has way more lethal crime than its developed peers. And unlike regimes like China, it makes less use of punitive punishments like the death sentence and forced evictions. But that doesn't explain the whole difference; studies have shown that US prison sentences are simply much longer than other nations'.
Map credit: German Lopez/Vox
II. The racism of America's criminal justice system
III. Mass incarceration is mostly a state and violent crime problem
States, not the federal government, hold most prisoners — and usually for violent offenses
A lot of mainstream media attention goes to the federal prison system and war on drugs. But most people in prison are held at the state level, and they're usually in for violent offenses. This poses a very tricky situation for US policymakers: If they want to undo mass incarceration, they're going to have to cut back on the number of violent offenders in prison — but lawmakers have to figure out how to do that without endangering public safety.
Chart credit: German Lopez/Vox
To really end mass incarceration, the US will need to cut back on some violent prisoners
Chart credit: Marshall Project
IV. High crime and drug use led to "tough-on-crime" policies
V. The policies behind mass incarceration
Prisoners serve much more time for the same crimes
Practically all crimes resulted in longer prison sentences after the 1980s. One particularly harsh form of sentencing was the "three-strikes" laws, which force people to serve 25 years to life after they're convicted of any third felony. Lawmakers also passed "truth-in-sentencing" laws that require inmates to serve most of their prison sentences — typically 85 percent — before qualifying for parole.
Chart credit: National Research Council
Mandatory minimum sentences elevated the punishment for drugs
The war on drugs has played a significant — but exaggerated — role in mass incarceration. In particular, states and the federal government created lengthy mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenses. So someone is not only more likely to be arrested for drugs since the 1980s, but more likely to serve a lengthy prison sentence, as well.
Chart credit: German Lopez/Vox, with data from