Native American Justice Initiative
South Dakota
Tribal-state collaboration for culturally appropriate diversion.
Strong Reform Potential
This initiative shows strong predicted outcomes across most impact dimensions. Minor gaps in political feasibility or implementation complexity are the primary risk factors. With adequate resourcing and stakeholder alignment, high success probability.
Diversion Reform Context
Keeping people out of the system before it traps them.
Diversion programs redirect individuals away from formal prosecution toward community-based support. Evidence shows pre-arrest and pre-trial diversion reduces recidivism, lowers court costs, and preserves community ties. Success depends on equitable eligibility criteria that don't replicate existing racial disparities in referral rates.
Impact, Operations and Cost
This reform shows meaningful projected impact for South Dakota. It addresses core systemic drivers with evidence-supported mechanisms, though targeted improvements to its weakest dimensions would significantly increase effectiveness. As of 2019, this initiative is actively operating and accumulating outcome data.
Diversion programs redirect individuals away from formal prosecution toward community-based alternatives. At the point of arrest or charge, eligible participants are referred to services such as treatment, counseling, or community service in place of traditional prosecution. A case manager or court monitor tracks compliance. Completion results in charges being reduced or dropped entirely.
Community-based diversion programs typically cost between $2,000 and $6,500 per participant annually. This compares to an average incarceration cost of $38,000 per person per year at the national level, representing a cost reduction of 80 to 95 percent for every successful diversion.
Initial program setup takes 6 to 12 months, covering staffing, referral protocols, and community partnerships. Participant enrollment is typically 90 to 180 days per cycle. Full systemic impact, measured through recidivism and cost data, becomes measurable at the 24 to 36 month mark post-launch.
- →Recidivism reduction of 30 to 45 percent compared to traditional prosecution outcomes
- →Cost savings of $30,000 or more per participant versus incarceration
- →Higher rates of maintained employment and family stability
- →Reduction in court and jail system burden, freeing capacity for serious offenses
Similar Reforms in Other States
Data Sources
Program data sourced from state legislative records and the National Conference of State Legislatures. Impact metrics from Bureau of Justice Statistics, RAND Corporation criminal justice research, Vera Institute, and The Sentencing Project. AltReform scores generated by our ML model trained on 20+ years of state-level reform outcomes. Statistics are the most recent available (2021–2024).