Empty prison corridor with open cell doors for an article about global prison population

The global prison population drops below 1 million for the first time

Note: This is an imagined future story, written as if a projected milestone has occurred. It is based on current trends and evidence, not confirmed events.

For the first time in recorded history, the number of people held in prisons and jails worldwide has fallen below one million — a threshold that marks the near-dismantling of a system of mass incarceration that once locked up more than 11 million people at any given moment. The milestone, confirmed by the World Prison Brief in its 2069 C.E. annual census, reflects decades of policy shifts, reinvestment in communities, and a hard-won global consensus: caging people rarely makes anyone safer.

In 2025 C.E., the global prison population stood at roughly 11.5 million. The United States alone held more than two million people — the highest rate in the world. The road from there to here was neither straight nor easy.

Key projections

  • Global prison population: Worldwide incarceration fell from 11.5 million in 2025 C.E. to under one million in 2069 C.E., a drop of more than 90 percent over four decades.
  • Community-based alternatives: More than 140 countries now fund mental health crisis response, housing-first programs, and restorative justice courts as primary responses to social instability — replacing police and jail as the default intervention.
  • Racial equity: In nations with the strongest diversion programs, the overrepresentation of Black and Indigenous people in prisons fell sharply — though gaps have not fully closed, and advocates continue to push for deeper systemic change.

What changed

The turning point came in the late 2020s C.E., when a wave of cities in the United States — including Chicago, Tucson, Denver, and Baltimore — began redirecting public safety dollars away from jails and toward community-based organizations. The Vera Institute of Justice documented these early experiments, showing that mental health teams, substance use counselors, and violence interrupters could resolve crises more effectively than arrest and incarceration.

Those pilot programs worked. Cities that invested in non-police crisis response saw reductions in repeat contact with the legal system — and no meaningful increase in serious crime. The evidence accumulated. Other cities followed. Then other countries.

By the 2040s C.E., the model had gone international. The UN Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners were overhauled into binding treaty obligations, and a new global fund — modeled partly on the climate finance mechanisms of earlier decades — channeled resources to low- and middle-income countries to build alternatives to detention. The same generation of policymakers who had watched renewable energy outcompete fossil fuels applied the same logic: when you invest in better systems, the old ones become unnecessary.

The communities that led the way

Much of the innovation came from places that mainstream policy circles had long ignored.

Indigenous communities across Latin America, Africa, and the Pacific had practiced restorative and community accountability processes for generations — systems that colonial legal structures had suppressed or dismissed. As the failures of mass incarceration became undeniable, those traditions gained formal recognition. Several nations legally codified Indigenous justice systems as co-equal to state courts, a shift that mirrored the growing recognition of Indigenous land rights that reshaped global governance earlier in the century.

Community-led violence interruption programs, many of them founded by formerly incarcerated people in the United States and Brazil, became internationally replicated models. The Equal Justice Initiative, founded in Montgomery, Alabama, in the 20th century, is now cited in policy frameworks on five continents.

What is still unresolved

The headline number is extraordinary. But advocates are careful not to overstate it.

The people who remain incarcerated — fewer than one million worldwide — are still disproportionately poor, still disproportionately from marginalized racial and ethnic groups, and still often housed in facilities that fall short of basic dignity standards. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime notes that a handful of authoritarian states do not report full data, meaning the real figure may be modestly higher than the official count.

The American Civil Liberties Union, which spent the early 21st century fighting mass incarceration case by case, celebrated the milestone but released a statement the same day: “One million is still one million too many. The work is not done.”

A different kind of public safety

What this moment really marks is a shift in how humanity thinks about harm — and about who deserves care versus punishment.

The countries that drove the steepest declines in incarceration were also, by most measures, among the safest. They invested in housing, mental health infrastructure, early childhood programs, and economic opportunity. They treated drug use as a health issue. They built conflict resolution into schools. They found, again and again, that community investment was not just a more humane alternative to incarceration — it was a more effective one.

In some ways, this moment echoes other large-scale shifts that once seemed impossible. The same decades that saw the share of global power capacity from renewable energy cross 49 percent also saw the first serious cracks appear in the logic of mass incarceration. Both transitions required dismantling entrenched systems that served powerful interests. Both were driven, at the margins, by communities with the most to lose — and the most to gain.

The prison, as a primary response to human suffering, is becoming a relic. Not because the problems it claimed to solve have disappeared. But because we finally built something better.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Vera Institute of Justice — Beyond Jails

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

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  • 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
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