
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


States are finding new ways to get smart on crime and, in the process, changing how America views crime and punishment. After decades of rising prison populations, reforms in 33 states have helped cut the national incarceration rate by 13 percent since 2007. That data point drives this episode's conversation about the new approaches, informed by research-based sentencing and corrections policies, that are slowing prison growth and helping communities become safer. Host Dan LeDuc speaks with Adam Gelb, director of Pew's public safety performance project, as well as two leaders in South Carolina—state Senator Gerald Malloy (D), who has led his state's reform efforts; and Bryan Stirling, state corrections director, who is implementing these transformative changes.
To listen and to learn more, visit pewtrusts.org/afterthefact.
By The Pew Charitable Trusts4.6
132132 ratings
States are finding new ways to get smart on crime and, in the process, changing how America views crime and punishment. After decades of rising prison populations, reforms in 33 states have helped cut the national incarceration rate by 13 percent since 2007. That data point drives this episode's conversation about the new approaches, informed by research-based sentencing and corrections policies, that are slowing prison growth and helping communities become safer. Host Dan LeDuc speaks with Adam Gelb, director of Pew's public safety performance project, as well as two leaders in South Carolina—state Senator Gerald Malloy (D), who has led his state's reform efforts; and Bryan Stirling, state corrections director, who is implementing these transformative changes.
To listen and to learn more, visit pewtrusts.org/afterthefact.

44,008 Listeners

32,317 Listeners

38,618 Listeners

6,834 Listeners

43,730 Listeners

9,251 Listeners

14,651 Listeners

113,004 Listeners

56,983 Listeners

2,365 Listeners

16,436 Listeners

6,452 Listeners

1,809 Listeners

16,218 Listeners

361 Listeners