Abstract
Punishment and incarceration are only two aspects of crime prevention. Beyond Bars: Uncovering the Hidden Barriers to Effective Crime Prevention explores the institutional, legal, social, and structural barriers that compromise the efficacy of modern crime prevention tactics. The report contends that an over-reliance on punitive measures hides more fundamental causes of criminal behavior, such as systematic discrimination, socioeconomic inequality, a lack of educational and career opportunities, insufficient community policing, and ineffective rehabilitative frameworks. It also identifies important but frequently disregarded obstacles to long-term crime control, such as policy gaps, inadequate interagency collaboration, and low public participation. The study emphasizes the importance of restorative practices, community-based interventions, and preventive justice by using an interdisciplinary approach that incorporates criminology, sociology, and legal theory. The abstract states that in order to effectively prevent crime, a paradigm shift from reactive incarceration-centric models to proactive, inclusive, and evidence-based policies that protect social justice and human rights while addressing the underlying causes of crime is necessary.