Budget/Policy/Rehabilitation
GDC Mission vs. Reality: The Rehabilitation That Does Not Exist
This GPS analysis document systematically dismantles the Georgia Department of Corrections' stated mission of rehabilitation by demonstrating a 46:1 spending ratio favoring surveillance over programming (~$120M vs ~$2.6M), ranking Georgia dead last among Southern states in per-inmate education spending at ~$39/year. Combined with DOJ findings of constitutional violations, 142 homicides (2018-2023), 50% officer vacancy rates, and neuroscience research showing chronic threat environments make learning biologically impossible, the document argues GDC has functionally abandoned its rehabilitation mandate while spending $1.8 billion annually on containment.
Pre-written explainers based on this research
All Data Points
118 verified data points extracted from primary sources.
GDC FY2024 Actual Budget Statistic
GDC's actual budget for FY2024 was $1,526,654,104.
$1.5B
GDC FY2025 Actual Budget Statistic
GDC's actual budget for FY2025 was $1,913,888,054.
$1.9B
GDC FY2026 Original Budget Statistic
GDC's original budget for FY2026 was $1,712,067,948.
$1.7B
GDC FY2026 Amended Budget Statistic
GDC's amended budget for FY2026 was $1,799,204,979.
$1.8B
GDC FY2027 Budget Statistic
GDC's budget for FY2027 is $1,778,839,635.
$1.8B
Largest Corrections Funding Increase in Georgia History Statistic
In 2025, the Georgia legislature approved $634 million in new corrections spending — the largest corrections funding increase in Georgia history: $434 million (AFY2025) + $200 million (FY2026).
$634M
GDC Healthcare Budget FY2026-27 Statistic
GDC healthcare spending is $417–432 million (FY2026-27), roughly 24% of the total budget.
$417M vs. million dollars (high end FY2027)
Physical Health Contract Increase AFY2026 Statistic
GDC's physical health contract increased by $38.9 million in AFY2026.
$38.9M
Outside-the-Wire Care Funding Statistic
GDC allocated $15 million for outside-the-wire care.
$15M
Electronic Health Records Funding Statistic
GDC allocated $15 million for Electronic Health Records.
$15M
Technology/Surveillance Spending Over $150 Million Statistic
GDC allocated over $150 million for technology and surveillance across multiple fiscal years, including thermal cameras/CCTVs/perimeter security ($84.7M), body cameras and tasers ($7.2M), officer tablets ($2.5M), off-site mail screening ($913K), man…
$150M
Thermal Cameras, CCTVs, Perimeter Security Funding Statistic
GDC allocated $84.7 million for thermal cameras, CCTVs, and perimeter security.
$84.7M
Managed Access Cell Phone Blocking Funding Statistic
GDC allocated over $35 million for managed access (cell phone blocking) technology.
$35M
Total New Rehabilitation/Education Investment ~$2.6 Million Statistic
Total new rehabilitation/education investment across AFY2026 and FY2027 budget years was approximately $2.6 million, including $336,851 (AFY2026) and $992,819 (FY2027) for additional programming through offender reentry services and a high school di…
$2.6M
Surveillance-to-Rehabilitation Spending Ratio 46:1 Finding
Georgia invested approximately $2.6 million in rehabilitation and education programming across two budget years and over $120 million in surveillance and technology in the same period — a ratio of roughly 46:1 in favor of watching people over helpin…
Education Not a Standalone Budget Program Data gap
Education is not a standalone budget program in GDC. It is buried inside the 'State Prisons' appropriation ($901–938 million) with no dedicated line item. GBPI noted increases of $1.2M (AFY2025) and $805,000 (FY2026) for 'technical and vocational ed…
GDC Mission Statement Policy
GDC's stated mission: 'To protect Georgians by operating secure facilities and providing opportunities for offender rehabilitation.' Two stated obligations: (1) operating secure facilities and (2) providing opportunities for rehabilitation.
142 Homicides in Georgia Prisons 2018-2023 Statistic
The U.S. Department of Justice confirmed 142 homicides in Georgia prisons between 2018 and 2023.
142 homicides
2024 Prison Homicides: GDC Count vs AJC Count Statistic
GDC's own count was 66 homicides in 2024, but the AJC confirmed 100+ homicides.
66 homicides (GDC count) vs. homicides (AJC confirmed, minimum)
1,400+ Reported Violence Incidents Jan 2022-Apr 2023 Statistic
Over 1,400 violence incidents were reported in Georgia prisons from January 2022 to April 2023. 19.7% involved a weapon, 45.1% resulted in serious injury, and 30.5% required offsite medical treatment.
1,400 violence incidents (minimum)
19.7% of Violence Incidents Involved a Weapon Statistic
Of the 1,400+ reported violence incidents from January 2022 to April 2023, 19.7% involved a weapon.
19.7%
45.1% of Violence Incidents Resulted in Serious Injury Statistic
Of the 1,400+ reported violence incidents from January 2022 to April 2023, 45.1% resulted in serious injury.
45.1%
30.5% of Violence Incidents Required Offsite Medical Treatment Statistic
Of the 1,400+ reported violence incidents from January 2022 to April 2023, 30.5% required offsite medical treatment.
30.5%
27,425 Weapons Recovered from Prisons Statistic
27,425 weapons were recovered from Georgia prisons between November 2021 and August 2023.
27,425 weapons
Violence Systematically Underreported in GDC Finding
Violence is systematically underreported in Georgia prisons — incidents are coded as 'injury' or 'disruptive event' instead of assault.
5,991 Budgeted Corrections Officer Positions Statistic
GDC has 5,991 budgeted corrections officer positions.
5,991 positions
2,985 Vacant Corrections Officer Positions — Nearly 50% Vacancy Statistic
2,985 corrections officer positions were vacant — nearly a 50% vacancy rate.
2,985 vacant positions vs. percent vacancy rate
One Officer Responsible for Nearly 400 Beds at Close-Security Prison Case detail
At one close-security prison, one officer was responsible for nearly 400 beds.
Hundreds of GDC Officers Arrested on Criminal Charges Statistic
Hundreds of GDC officers have been arrested on criminal charges in the past six years.
Padlocks Used on Cell Doors Violating National Standards Finding
GDC uses padlocks on cell doors, violating national standards.
Fire Safety Systems Non-Operational in Georgia Prisons Finding
Fire safety systems in Georgia prisons are non-operational.
Gangs Control Housing Units in Georgia Prisons Finding
DOJ found that gangs control housing units, direct where people sleep, and extort families in Georgia prisons.
DOJ Found Reasonable Cause Georgia Violates Eighth Amendment Legal fact
The U.S. Department of Justice found reasonable cause that Georgia violates the Eighth Amendment (October 2024).
Prefrontal Cortex Shuts Down Under Mild Acute Stress Finding
Research from Yale (Arnsten, 2009) found: 'Even quite mild acute uncontrollable stress can cause a rapid and dramatic loss of prefrontal cognitive abilities.' Chronic stress causes structural damage: 'dendrites in the PFC begin to change after only …
Chronic Stress Physically Shrinks the Hippocampus Finding
Chronic stress physically shrinks the hippocampus. PTSD patients had smaller hippocampal volume correlating with deficits in verbal memory.
Incarceration Causes Cognitive Decline — Rikers Island Study Finding
Rikers Island study (N=197) found cognitive control declined significantly over just 4 months (Cohen's d=0.41, p
Incarcerated Youth Executive Functioning Deficits Statistic
Incarcerated youth scored at the 30th–37th percentile on executive functioning. 74% had Individual Education Plans.
74%
Georgia Released 11,681 People in 2022 Statistic
According to BJS Prisoners in 2023 Table 9, Georgia released 11,681 people in 2022.
11,681 people released
Georgia Released 11,798 People in 2023 Statistic
According to BJS Prisoners in 2023 Table 9, Georgia released 11,798 people in 2023.
11,798 people released
FY24 Parole Board Releases: 5,443 Statistic
In FY2024, the Georgia Parole Board released 5,443 people.
5,443 parole releases
95% of All State Prisoners Eventually Released Statistic
National BJS statistic: At least 95% of all state prisoners will eventually be released.
95%
~12,000 People Released from Georgia Prisons Annually Statistic
Every year, approximately 12,000 people walk out of Georgia's prisons — approximately 33 per day.
12,000 people per year
Georgia's Official 3-Year Reconviction Rate: 25-27% Statistic
Georgia's official 3-year reconviction rate is 25-27%, meaning approximately 3,000-3,200 people per release cohort will be reconvicted.
25% vs. percent (high end)
Reducing Recidivism 10 Points = ~1,200 Fewer Crimes and ~$40M Savings Finding
Reducing recidivism by 10 percentage points would mean approximately 1,200 fewer crimes per year, approximately 1,200 fewer victims, and approximately $40 million in avoided incarceration costs.
RAND: Educational Programs Reduce Recidivism by 43% Statistic
RAND Corporation found that inmates who participate in educational programs are 43% less likely to recidivate.
43%
Bard Prison Initiative: Under 4% Recidivism Statistic
The Bard Prison Initiative achieves under 4% recidivism among its participants.
4%
RAND: Every $1 in Education Saves $4-5 Statistic
RAND Corporation found that every $1 invested in prison education saves $4-5.
$4.00 vs. dollars return per dollar invested (high end)
Georgia Spends $52 Per Inmate Per Year on Rehabilitation Statistic
Georgia spends approximately $52 per inmate per year on rehabilitation ($2.6M divided by 50,000 inmates = $52).
$52.00 vs. dollars per year cost to incarcerate
Cost to Incarcerate: ~$34,000 Per Year Statistic
The cost to incarcerate one person in Georgia is approximately $34,000 per year.
$34,000
No Pay for Prison Labor in Georgia ($0) Policy
Georgia provides no pay for prison labor — incarcerated workers earn $0.
Georgia Bans Financial Aid for Incarcerated Students Policy
Georgia bans financial aid for prison education. This is NOT a law — it's a 1995 administrative regulation from Governor Zell Miller's reelection anxiety. Georgia and Indiana specifically stripped existing aid from incarcerated students.
No Published Data on Programming Access Percentage Data gap
GDC publishes no data on what percentage of the prison population has access to programming.
No Dedicated Rehabilitation Budget Line Data gap
GDC has no dedicated rehabilitation budget line item.
California: 299 Innovative Programming Grants Since 2014 Statistic
California has issued 299 Innovative Programming Grants since 2014 following Brown v. Plata.
299 programming grants
Texas Prison Entrepreneurship Program: 6,000 Men Annually Statistic
Texas Prison Entrepreneurship Program serves 6,000 men annually with a Baylor-certified Mini-MBA.
6,000 men annually
Thinking for a Change: 23% vs 36% Control Recidivism Statistic
Evidence shows Thinking for a Change produces 23% recidivism compared to 36% in the control group.
23% vs. percent recidivism (control group)
Gate Release Package: $25 Visa Card and Minimal Support Policy
GDC provides upon release: a $25 prepaid Visa card, whatever was in the inmate trust account, a shirt/pants/cheap shoes, and a bus ticket if no one picks them up. No housing referral, no job placement, no ID, no phone, no transitional support.
Post-Release Mortality Dramatically Elevated in First Two Weeks Finding
Post-release mortality is dramatically elevated in the first two weeks after prison release, according to NEJM (Binswanger 2007).
GDC Claims 45,000 Certificates in FY2024 Finding
GDC Commissioner Oliver claimed 45,000 certificates were issued in FY2024, but this bundles micro-credentials (CPR, food handler, 'Business Etiquette') with real vocational certifications.
Reentry Centers: 2,344 Beds for ~50,000 Inmates (4.7% Capacity) Statistic
Georgia's reentry centers have 2,344 beds for approximately 50,000 inmates, representing only 4.7% capacity.
2,344 beds vs. percent of prison population
Vocational Education Budget: $172,000 Statewide ($3.44/Person) Statistic
Georgia's vocational education budget is $172,000 statewide for FY2025, equaling $3.44 per person.
$172,000 vs. dollars per person
Vocational Completers Recidivate at 13.64% vs 26% General Statistic
Vocational program completers in Georgia prisons recidivate at 13.64% compared to 26% general population — proving programs work when they exist.
13.6% vs. percent recidivism (general population)
50-66% of Prisoners Have Substance Use Disorders Statistic
50-66% of Georgia prisoners have substance use disorders, but RSAT capacity is 'severely limited.'
50% vs. percent (high end)
40% of Georgia Prisoners Lack a High School Credential Statistic
40% of Georgia prisoners lack a high school credential.
40%
DOJ Found Programming 'Slashed Rather Than Expanded' Finding
The DOJ found that programming in Georgia prisons was 'slashed rather than expanded' and participation was 'effectively impossible.'
Georgia State University Shut Down Prison Education Program March 2024 Case detail
Georgia State University shut down its prison education program in March 2024. The program cost $180,000 per year and served 60 students.
Statewide Lockdown Estimate: ~60 Days Per Year Statistic
Statewide estimate of approximately 60 days per year on lockdown in Georgia prisons.
60 days per year
Washington State Prison Locked Down Since January 11 Riots Case detail
Washington State Prison has been locked down since January 11 riots — 60+ normal days plus 60+ continuous post-riot lockdown days.
Evening Programming Never Restored After COVID (2020) Finding
Evening programming in Georgia prisons was never restored after COVID (2020) — 6 years later as of the document date.
DOJ: Understaffing Affects Programs Quote
DOJ found: 'Understaffing affects programs... prisons do not have enough staff to prevent or even respond to the most blatant gang activities, let alone provide programs.'
Georgia K-12 Education: ~$28 Billion Per Year Statistic
Total Georgia K-12 education spending from all sources is approximately $28 billion per year ($16,526 per pupil × 1.7 million students).
$28B
TCSG vs GDC Education Spending Ratio: 69:1 Statistic
Technical College System of Georgia spends $444M for 159,280 students ($2,788/student) while GDC spends approximately $2M for 50,000 people ($40/person) — a ratio of 69:1.
69 ratio (TCSG:GDC per student)
DREAMS Scholarship vs GDC Education Spending Ratio: 162:1 Statistic
The DREAMS Scholarship was signed by Governor Kemp for $325M (AFY2026), compared to GDC's approximately $2M for prison education — a ratio of 162:1.
$325M vs. million dollars (GDC prison education)
HOPE Scholarship: $1B/Year, Inmates Banned Since 1995 Statistic
Georgia's HOPE Scholarship provides $1 billion per year for education, but incarcerated people have been banned from accessing it since 1995 by administrative regulation.
$1B
Education = 0.11% of $1.8B Corrections Budget Statistic
Prison education represents 0.11% of the $1.8 billion corrections budget — $40/year per person or $0.11/day, which is less than the cost of 45 ramen packets from commissary ($0.90 each).
0.1%
Federal Pell Grants Restored July 1, 2023 Legal fact
Federal Pell Grants for incarcerated students were restored on July 1, 2023, with programs expanding in 44 states. Georgia is closing programs instead (GSU shutdown March 2024).
Vocational Training: 205% ROI Statistic
Vocational training in prisons produces a 205% return on investment.
205%
College Programs: $16,908 Economic Impact Per Student Statistic
College programs in prisons produce $16,908 in economic impact per student.
$16,908
Quote: Wynter — 'No Matter How Good I Am' Quote
Wynter, 'No Matter How Good I Am': 'I finished my entire case plan within two years. I've worked many jobs including law library, education, vocation. I have graduated two different faith and character programs. Nothing helps to reduce my time. I've…
Quote: Wynter on Mandatory Minimum Sentencing Quote
Wynter: 'That's what mandatory minimum sentencing does. It removes all hope of a person doing the right thing. No matter how good I am, no matter how much I change, it doesn't help me to go home.'
Quote: Mikemike — 'Magazines Wrapped Around My Chest' Quote
Mikemike, 'Magazines Wrapped Around My Chest': 'I'm a lifer so they don't like to give us education. They'll put short timers ahead of us on the list. They don't try to rehabilitate you. It seems easier to control a dumb person.'
Quote: KingdomMan32 — 'Better Chances' Quote
KingdomMan32, 'Better Chances': 'I've been down 17 years now. Seventeen years of living in what I can only describe as a war zone. Literally war. Gang violence and extreme officer shortage. No yard call. No groups or classes. Nothing to help ease yo…
Quote: Mikemike — Sleeping with Weapons Quote
Mikemike: 'I've had to sleep with a knife in my hand. I have to use the bathroom with a weapon because I witnessed an associate get murdered while sitting on the toilet. I've had to sleep with magazines wrapped around my chest to keep from getting s…
Quote: NeverGiveUp — 'Let Me Go or Just Execute Me' Quote
NeverGiveUp, 'Let Me Go or Just Execute Me': 'We were sent here to learn a lesson from our mistakes and come out a better person. In most cases, that is the opposite of what happens.'
Quote: Bandit — 'We Are People, Not Statistics' Quote
Bandit, 'We Are People, Not Statistics': 'I have been threatened, had weapons pulled on me, had someone five feet away from me stabbed, been fed rancid and moldy food, had roaches and rats everywhere, drank water I've been told is toxic, seen people…
Quote: Anonymous Prisoner — 'Invisible Scars' Quote
Anonymous prisoner, 'Invisible Scars': 'I watched in horror as I saw a man stabbed through the chest. He stumbled down the stairs, the only thing coming out of his mouth was blood and gurgling. For 30 agonizing minutes, we watched helplessly as this…
Quote: NeverGiveUp — 69 Years Old with Prostate Cancer Quote
NeverGiveUp: 'I'm 69 years old. I pee through a tube because of prostate cancer. I am a man who has no purpose to his existence on this earth. Let me go or just execute me.'
Quote: Forever19 — 'Seventy Dollars' Quote
Forever19, 'Seventy Dollars': 'I went in at 19 and came out at 36. My twenties and thirties, gone. The world moved on without me.'
AJC: GDC Officials Presented False or Misleading Information Finding
AJC found GDC officials 'repeatedly presented false or misleading information to federal investigators, state lawmakers and a federal judge.'
GDC Commissioner Called News Coverage 'Propaganda' Finding
GDC Commissioner called news coverage 'propaganda' in response to DOJ findings.
GDC Response to DOJ: 'Extremely Disappointed' Quote
GDC responded to DOJ findings saying they were 'Extremely disappointed... fails to acknowledge extraordinary efforts of staff.'
Senate Study Committee Shot Down Oversight Body Dec 13, 2024 Case detail
The Senate Study Committee voted for the status quo on December 13, 2024, shooting down proposals for an oversight body, de-escalation training, and reintegration programming.
Walker State Prison: Proof That Adequate Staffing + Programming = Zero Homicides Finding
Walker State Prison is GDC's own proof that adequate staffing combined with programming produces zero homicides.
Georgia Ranks Dead Last Among Southern States in Per-Inmate Education Spending Finding
Georgia ranks dead last among Southern states in per-inmate education spending at approximately $39 per year.
Only 3 of 82 DOJ Remedial Measures Address Programming Finding
Only 3 of the DOJ's 82 remedial measures address programming: #63 substance abuse, #64(a) graduated housing with programs, and #64(e) programs for community return. No mandates for education, vocational, cognitive-behavioral, GED, or college. Nobody…
Georgia Recidivism Data Suppressed by Three Exclusions Methodology note
Georgia's claimed 25-27% three-year felony reconviction rate is suppressed by three exclusions: reconviction only (not rearrest), three-year window only, and deaths excluded.
National BJS Recidivism: 68% 3-Year Rearrest, 83% 9-Year Statistic
National BJS data (30 states including Georgia): 3-year rearrest rate 68%, 6-year 79%, 9-year 83%, average 5 arrests per person.
83% vs. percent 3-year rearrest rate
Actual Return-to-Incarceration Rate Estimated ~50% Statistic
Georgia's actual return-to-incarceration rate is estimated at approximately 50% — double the official figure of 25-27%.
50% vs. percent (official claim)
Only 9 States Report All Three Recidivism Measures; Georgia Not Among Them Data gap
Only 9 states report all three recidivism measures (rearrest, reconviction, reincarceration); Georgia is not among them.
Graham v. Florida: Rehabilitation Is a Penological Goal Legal fact
Supreme Court in Graham v. Florida, 560 U.S. 48 (2010): A life sentence without parole 'forswears altogether the rehabilitative ideal.' Rehabilitation is 'a penological goal that forms the basis of parole systems.'
Miller v. Alabama: Mandatory LWOP for Juveniles Unconstitutional Legal fact
Miller v. Alabama, 567 U.S. 460 (2012): Mandatory life without parole for juveniles is unconstitutional; children have 'greater prospects for reform.'
Montgomery v. Louisiana: Opportunity for Release Based on Rehabilitation Legal fact
Montgomery v. Louisiana, 577 U.S. 190 (2016): 'The opportunity for release will be afforded to those who demonstrate the truth of Miller's central intuition — that children who commit even heinous crimes are capable of change.'
Holt v. Sarver: Absence of Rehabilitation May Have Constitutional Significance Legal fact
Holt v. Sarver, 300 F. Supp. 825 (1970): 'The absence of an affirmative program of training and rehabilitation may have constitutional significance where conditions and practices exist which actually militate against reform and rehabilitation.'
Constitutional Advocacy Argument: Systematic Denial of Rehabilitation Finding
The document argues: If the Constitution forbids 'forswearing altogether the rehabilitative ideal' for one juvenile, what does it say about a state that systematically denies rehabilitation to 50,000 people — 95% of whom will return to society? Geor…
Florida Per-Inmate Education Spending: ~$1,028/Year Statistic
Florida spends approximately $91 million on prison education for 88,500 inmates, equaling approximately $1,028 per year per inmate, with 21% recidivism and a 119% increase in education spending in 3 years.
$1,028 vs. Georgia dollars per inmate per year
Alabama Per-Inmate Education Spending: ~$742/Year Statistic
Alabama spends approximately $19.3 million on prison education for 26,000 inmates, equaling approximately $742 per year per inmate — even under federal oversight, Alabama outspends Georgia 19x.
$742.00 vs. Georgia dollars per inmate per year
Texas Per-Inmate Education Spending: ~$508-585/Year Statistic
Texas spends approximately $66-76 million on prison education for 130,000 inmates, equaling approximately $508-585 per year per inmate, with 15% recidivism. Texas operates the Windham School District.
$508.00 vs. dollars per inmate per year (high end)
Mississippi: 80% Enrolled in Programming Despite Being Poorest State Statistic
Mississippi, the poorest state in the nation, enrolls 80% of its 10,549 inmates in programming and spends $4 million or more on prison education.
80%
South Carolina: 17.1% Recidivism (Lowest in Nation) Statistic
South Carolina has 17.1% recidivism, the lowest in the nation, with 16,400 inmates and 8,294 credentials awarded per year.
17.1%
Quote: Winston Churchill on Treatment of Criminals Quote
Winston Churchill, Home Secretary, Parliament (July 20, 1910): 'The mood and temper of the public in regard to the treatment of crime and criminals is one of the most unfailing tests of the civilisation of any country.'
Quote: Nelson Mandela on Judging Nations by Jails Quote
Nelson Mandela, Long Walk to Freedom: 'No one truly knows a nation until one has been inside its jails. A nation should not be judged by how it treats its highest citizens, but its lowest ones.'
Quote: Dostoevsky on Prison Not Reforming Criminals Quote
Dostoevsky, The House of the Dead (1862): 'Prison and penal servitude do not, of course, reform the criminal; they only punish him and secure society against his further attempt on its space.'
GPS Research Library: 5,000+ Data Points Across 80+ Collections Methodology note
GPS Research Library contains over 5,000 data points across more than 80 collections.
Prisons Built 50+ Years Ago with Minimal Maintenance Finding
DOJ found Georgia prisons built 50+ years ago with minimal maintenance.
Quote: Arnsten on Stress and Prefrontal Cortex Quote
Yale researcher Arnsten (2009): 'Even quite mild acute uncontrollable stress can cause a rapid and dramatic loss of prefrontal cognitive abilities.' Also: 'dendrites in the PFC begin to change after only one week of stress.'
Hypervigilance Prevents Prefrontal Cortex Activation Finding
When the amygdala activates fight-or-flight, the prefrontal cortex cannot be simultaneously activated. Blood drains from the prefrontal cortex — no rational thought. It is 'virtually impossible to learn new things, focus on small tasks, or engage wi…
North Carolina Per-Inmate Education Spending: ~$463/Year Statistic
North Carolina spends approximately $13.9 million on prison education for 30,000 inmates, equaling approximately $463 per year per inmate, with a community college partnership.
$463.00
GBPI: $1.2M AFY2025 and $805K FY2026 for Vocational Education Statistic
GBPI noted increases of $1.2 million (AFY2025) and $805,000 (FY2026) for 'technical and vocational education programs and related equipment.'
$1.2M vs. dollars (FY2026)
Sources
21 cited sources backing this research.
Primary
Official report
2024 Senate Study Committee Report
Secondary
Journalism
AJC Investigations
Primary
Official report
BJS Prisoners in 2023
Primary
Official report
DOJ Findings Report (September 2024)
Secondary
Official report
Education Commission of the States
Secondary
Official report
GBPI Budget Overviews
Primary
Official report
Primary
Official report
Governor's Budget Report AFY2026/FY2027
Secondary
Gps original
Primary
Gps original
GPS Research Library
Primary
Legal document
Graham v. Florida 560 U.S. 48
Primary
Legal document
Holt v. Sarver 300 F. Supp. 825
Primary
Legal document
Miller v. Alabama 567 U.S. 460
Primary
Legal document
Montgomery v. Louisiana 577 U.S. 190
Primary
Academic
NEJM (Binswanger 2007)
Primary
Academic
Primary
Academic
Primary
Academic
RAND Corporation (2013)
Primary
Academic
Secondary
Official report
Vera Institute
Primary
Academic
Key Entities
Organizations, people, facilities, and other named entities referenced in this research.
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
[organization]
Autry State Prison
[facility]
Bard Prison Initiative
[program]
Brown v. Plata
[case]
California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation
[organization]
Commissioner Oliver
[person]
DREAMS Scholarship
[program]
Eastern State Penitentiary
[facility]
Georgia Budget and Policy Institute
[organization]
Georgia Department of Corrections
[organization]
Georgia Prisoners' Speak
[organization]
Georgia Senate Study Committee
[organization]
Georgia State Board of Pardons and Paroles
[organization]
Georgia State University
[organization]
Graham v. Florida
[case]
Holt v. Sarver
[case]
HOPE Scholarship
[program]
ITF
[program]
Metro Reentry Facility
[facility]
Miller v. Alabama
[case]
Montgomery v. Louisiana
[case]
RAND Corporation
[organization]
Residential Substance Abuse Treatment
[program]
Technical College System of Georgia
[organization]
Texas Prison Entrepreneurship Program
[program]
Thinking for a Change
[program]
U.S. Department of Justice
[organization]
U.S. Supreme Court
[organization]
Walker State Prison
[facility]
Windham School District
[organization]
Zell Miller
[person]