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Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to examine the prevalence with which individuals with intellectual disability are housed in jails and prisons.

Design/methodology/approach

This was a literature review of individuals with intellectual disability who are in prison.

Findings

Persons with intellectual disability are imprisoned approximately seven times more frequently than would be expected by their prevalence in the general population.

Research limitations/implications

Factors likely to contribute to this overrepresentation are reviewed, including need for supports and acquiescence of people with intellectual disability.

Practical implications

People who have intellectual disability do not receive needed supports and services in prison.

Social implications

Supports are needed to end this overreliance on prisons to support people who have intellectual disability.

Originality/value

The paper highlights the magnitude by which imprisonment exceeds the level that would be expected from population prevalence alone. It highlights the problems associated with insufficient funding and supports.

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