The Poverty-to-Prison Pipeline: How Georgia Criminalizes Being Poor

Georgia has the world’s highest incarceration rate – achieved by systematically criminalizing poverty through cash bail, court fines, and predatory fees.

Boys from Georgia’s poorest families face 20x higher incarceration rates than those from middle and upper-class households.

Normalization: The Principle That Changes Everything

Georgia’s prisons aren’t broken—they’re illegal. Learn how the normalization model can end unconstitutional punishment and rebuild safety, dignity, and justice.

Georgia’s prisons aren’t “broken” — they’re illegal.

The Constitution says the punishment is the loss of liberty, not starvation, violence, neglect, or death.
Yet every day, Georgia piles on punishments no judge ever ordered.

Every other developed nation treats prison as a place for rehabilitation.
Georgia treats it as a dumping ground for suffering.

Normalization is how we realign Georgia with the law, with humanity, and with public safety.

Georgia now faces a choice:
continue running prisons that violate the Constitution, or adopt the normalization model that every safe, sane society already follows.

One path breeds violence.
The other creates redemption.
Only one is legal.

Georgia Prison Security Levels

The Georgia Department of Corrections’ own numbers show how medium-security prisons are now functioning like high-security facilities. This table—based on October 27, 2025 data—exposes systemic classification drift that’s fueling Georgia’s deadly prison crisis.

Separate Gangs, Save Lives: Gang Control in Georgia Prisons

Gang violence killed 100+ in Georgia prisons in 2024. The DOJ found gangs control entire housing units. Arizona cut violence 50% with gang separation. Texas achieved major reductions in homicide. The solution exists—Georgia refuses to implement it. This reference guide explains the crisis, the evidence, and what you can do.

Report a Problem