The number of people incarcerated in American prisons is the lowest it's been in decades. But a new report from The Vera Institute of Justice, a non-profit research group that wants to limit mass incarceration in the United States, tells a more complex story.

In "The New Dynamics of Mass Incarceration," researchers found that in some states, the incarcerated population has shifted away from prisons and into local jails, which primarily hold people arrested, but not yet convicted, of a crime. The report finds many jail populations are on the rise.

Jasmine Heiss with the Vera Institute said that's challenging because there's a lack of real-time information about what is happening in local jails. Heiss said that's because oversight, data collection and reporting vary from state to state and even county to county.

"And so you have this huge swath of the incarcerated population, about 18 times as many admissions to state and federal prisons each year that we really do not know enough about," she said.

The study says between 2010 and 2015, 11 states reduced their prison populations, but simultaneously increased the number of people held in jails.

According to the report, Indiana reduced prison admissions by 21.4 percent in 2016, but its county jail population grew by 32 percent between 2015 and 2017. In Virginia, prisons had a low and steady growth rate of 4 percent from 2000 to 2012.

But that number hides the fact that admissions in rural jails increased 56 percent during that time. In Alaska, the prison population fell 30 percent from 2007 to 2015 while it's jail population jumped 166 percent. But the state combines jail and prison facilities. Researchers distinguished jail and prison time by the length of the sentences. Anything greater than one year was assigned to prison, Heiss said.

"It is now small cities and rural areas largely that are bearing the heaviest burdens of mass incarceration," said Heiss.

The turn of the 21st century marked the beginning of widespread efforts to roll back the country's startling and uniquely high prison incarceration rates. And for a long time, Heiss said researchers used prison populations as the barometer for measuring how effective those policies were.

But researchers found that doesn't tell the whole story. So they started including local jails in that tally, and it's painted a darker picture in some cases than many initially thought.

"It's clear to us that if we don't look carefully at these distinct trends, what's driving them and think carefully about how to undo them, not only won't we reverse our reliance on mass incarceration, we'll leave big swaths of the country behind," Heiss said.

Still, the report shows 34 states have reduced their total (prison and jail) incarceration rates since the national peak in 2007. Vera researchers said that suggests reforms designed to reduce overall incarceration have been successful.

"The aim of this report is not to throw cold water on reform, but rather to add fuel to the fire", said Christian Henrichson, Center Research Director at Vera. "Vera's research shows there is an urgent need to rethink our approach to ending mass incarceration. While we celebrate the successes that have been achieved, the road to countering systemic injustice is difficult and complex."

Arkansas, Kentucky, West Virginia and Oklahoma continue to lock people up in prison and jail at all-time high rates.

Funding for the study was provided by the John D. and Catherine T. Macarthur Foundation, which also contributes to NPR.

Copyright 2018 KUER 90.1. To see more, visit KUER 90.1.

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