One in three adults in the United States has been arrested at least once, a strikingly high number compared with many other countries. Now, a new study reveals one of the implications of that figure: Nearly half of unemployed U.S. men have a criminal conviction by age 35, which makes it harder to get a job, according to an analysis of survey data.
The findings suggest having a criminal justice history is pushing many men to the sidelines of the job market, says sociologist Sarah Esther Lageson of Rutgers University, Newark, who was not involved in the study. “I’m not sure that many people understand just how prevalent an arrest is,” she says. “It really shows up [that unemployment] is actually a mass criminalization problem. … Because arrests are so common, they shouldn’t be considered in an employment context at all,” she says.
The work began when Amy Solomon, then head of the Federal Interagency Reentry […]
This is how the “accountability culture” works. Accountability for the poor while turning a blind eye to the transgressions of the wealthy and well connected. This process is a feature of the system, not a bug. Remember, from an engineering perspective: The purpose of a thing is what it does. Not what it is “supposed” to do, not what you are told it does, but what it actually does.