This article presents a method for evaluating drivers that are influencing the change in age distributions among prisoners.
For the past several decades, the U.S. prison system has witnessed a steady and persistent increase in the ages of prison populations. Given the additional costs and burdens placed on prisons as they house older inmates, this aging trend has generated intense interest among policymakers and academics who seek to understand why prison populations are getting older. As part of this effort, the current study developed a methodological approach that was applied to prison data from four States that report to the Bureau of Justice Statistics National Corrections Reporting Program. The study found that since 2000, the primary driver of overall growth in the elderly populations in prison (defined as inmates over 50) is the increasing admission age of offenders entering prison. Moreover, changes in offense mix and sentence length/time served over the last decade have had significantly less influence on the age composition of prison populations. The study also found that the impact of explanatory factors varied across States and offense types. For example, prison admission and exit rates explain much of the change in elderly drug offenders in New York, but not elderly violent offenders, where admission age plays a much stronger explanatory role. This analysis offers an effective demonstration that supports the use of this method as an important and informative first step toward understanding components of change that affect the problem of prison aging. (Publisher abstract modified)