
More Popular Issues
See how voters are siding on other popular political issues...
Should prisons ban the use of solitary confinement for juveniles?
Results from Race (Other) voters
Last answered 12 minutes ago

Yes
2,877 votes
52%
No
2,649 votes
48%
Distribution of answers submitted by Race (Other) voters.
Data includes total votes submitted by visitors since Jan 26, 2016. For users that answer more than once (yes we know), only their most recent answer is counted in the total results. Total percentages may not add up to exactly 100% as we allow users to submit "grey area" stances that may not be categorized into yes/no stances.
Race data estimated by matching users to U.S. Census data block groups via the American Community Survey (2007-2011).
Choose a demographic filter
City
Party
Ideology
Website
*Education
*Household
* Data estimated by matching users to U.S. Census data block groups via the American Community Survey (2007-2011)
Learn more about Solitary Confinement for Juveniles
In January 2016, President Obama issued a series of executive actions banning federal prisons from using solitary confinement to punish juveniles and prisoners who commit low level infractions. His orders also lowered the number of days an adult inmate could be subject to solitary confinement from 365 days to 60 days. A recent study found that prisoners who were subject to solitary confinement were 20-25% more likely to be repeat criminal offenders than prisoners who avoided it. See recent solitary confinement news