It’s easy to say a system needs new incentives. It’s much harder to explain what that would actually demand in practice. Incentives aren’t just policies. They’re funding structures, authority hierarchies, political comfort zones, and long-standing cultural assumptions about crime and punishment. Arizona Department of Corrections operates within a framework that rewards operational stability above all else. As long as facilities run without visible chaos, as long as populations are contained, and as long as public fear is managed, the institution is considered effective. Changing that would mean tying success not to containment, but to what happens long after someone walks out the gate. Real incentive disruption would start with measurement. Funding and evaluation would need to hinge on long-term stability metrics—reduced returns, improved mental health outcomes, sustained employment, community integration. Not six months after release. Years. That kind of measurement shifts accounta...
When an institution produces the same negative outcomes for decades and still remains intact, the explanation isn’t mystery. It’s incentives. Arizona Department of Corrections doesn’t survive because it’s flawless. It survives because its incentives are aligned with preservation, not transformation. Stability inside the system matters more than effectiveness outside of it. Most people assume that if something isn’t working, it will eventually be forced to change. That assumption only holds true when failure threatens the institution’s core incentives. In AZDOC’s case, it rarely does. Funding isn’t primarily tied to long-term rehabilitation success. Authority isn’t granted based on post-release stability. Promotions aren’t structured around reduced recidivism years down the line. Instead, incentives are tied to maintaining order, managing populations, and avoiding visible crises. As long as the prison operates without major disruption, the system is considered functional. This is w...