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The image shows a bar graph with data from 5 countries—Great Britain, Australia, New Zealand, United States, and Canada—across 6 decades—1930, 1940, 1950, 1960, 1970, 1980. Units on Y-axis range from 0 to 160 with intervals of 20. In 1930, Great Britain and Australia have identical highest values at 120, followed by New Zealand at 100, the United States at 80, and Canada at 60. In 1940, Australia leads at 160, Great Britain at 140, New Zealand at 120, the United States at 100, and Canada at 80. For 1950, Australia's value decreases to 140, Great Britain and New Zealand both at 120, the United States at 100, and Canada at 80. In 1960, New Zealand's data rises to 140, Great Britain at 120, Canada increases to 100, Australia drops to 100, and the United States remains at 100. The 1970 data show New Zealand and Great Britain both at 120, the United States at 100, Australia at 80, and Canada at 60. Finally, in 1980, Australia, United States, and Canada are at 100, Great Britain at 80, and New Zealand drops to 60.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The bar chart depicts several imprisonments in 5 different nations in the period time of 1930 to 1980. Overall, the United States and Canada had high quantities of imprisonment compared to three other countries, while Australia, New Zealand, and Great Britain had a low number and never exceeded those two previous countries.
Initially, Canada had the highest rates of imprisonment twice throughout the period in 1930 and 1950, then it decreased for the last three years from 1960 until 1980 and was replaced by the United States, which ultimately has the most people with prison punishment and peaked at 130 figures in 1980.
On the other hand, Great Britain had the lowest rates with only 30 people in 1930. However, the number increased consistently, with an average of 3–5 people every year. In contrast, Australia and New Zealand had an extremely fluctuating rate. They peaked approximately at 62 and 82 individuals respectively.
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