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Annual Survey of Jails in Indian Country, 2024
Add to My BasketDescription
The purpose of the Survey of Jails in Indian Country is an enumeration of all known adult and juvenile facilities -- jails, confinement facilities, detention centers, and other correctional facilities operated by tribal authorities or the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), U.S. Department of the Interior. For the purpose of this collection, Indian country includes reservations, pueblos, rancherias, and other Native American and Alaska Native communities throughout the United States. The survey collects data on the number of adults and juveniles held on the last weekday in June 2024, type of offense, average daily population in June, most crowded day in June, admissions and releases in June, number of inmate deaths and suicide attempts from July 1, 2023 through June 30, 2024, rated capacity on June 28, and jail staffing on June 28, 2024.
Detailed Methodology
For 2024, the survey roster consisted of 98 facilities. Prior to the fielding of the survey, 18 facilities were nonoperational or out of scope. During the fielding of the survey, three additional facilities were determined to be nonoperational or out of scope. Of the 77 active facilities, one facility, the Tohono O'odham Juvenile Detention Center in Arizona, did not respond to the data collection. When comparing 2024 data to the resulting report, data on inmate populations were estimated for survey and item nonresponse. BJS used the most recent data available to impute the June midyear and peak populations, ADP, admissions, and rated capacity. Estimation procedures for inmate characteristics and jail staff are included in appendix tables 3 and 4 in Jails in Indian Country, 2024.
- Survey (self- or interviewer-administered)