The Cycle

Policing, incarceration, and mental illness in America

This project is supported by a grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation’s Safety and Justice Challenge.

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A view of prison employees from inside a cell in the Secured Housing Unit at Pelican Bay State Prison in Crescent City, California, in February 2012
Jim Wilson / The New York Times / Redux

The Truth About Deinstitutionalization

A popular theory links the closing of state psychiatric hospitals to the increased incarceration of people with mental illness. But the reality is more complicated.
A monarch butterfly rests on a wire fence set into The Experiment’s image template.
Chris Melville / Shutterstock

The Experiment Podcast: What Makes a Murderer?

A widely criticized legal principle disproportionately puts youth of color and women behind bars. But is it the only way to hold police accountable when they kill?
A silhouette of a man from behind, against a grey background
Illustration by Cam Floyd; animation by Andrew Embury

The Tragedy of Mental Illness in American Prisons

At the time of his death, following a violent altercation with guards, Karl Taylor was one of thousands of mentally ill inmates who are confined to institutions that are supremely ill-equipped to handle them.
A man in a jail cell with his head in his hands
Charles Rex Arbogast / AP

America’s Largest Mental Hospital Is a Jail

At Cook County, where a third of those incarcerated suffer from psychological disorders, officials are looking for ways to treat inmates less like prisoners and more like patients.