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The image presents a bar chart illustrating imprisonment figures in thousands for Great Britain, Australia, New Zealand, United States, and Canada for the years 1930, 1940, 1950, 1960, 1970, and 1980. In 1930, values were Great Britain 30, Australia 70, New Zealand 40, United States 100, Canada 120; in 1940, Great Britain 65, Australia 85, New Zealand 45, United States 120, Canada 100; in 1950, Great Britain 75, Australia 55, New Zealand 45, United States 125, Canada 95; in 1960, Great Britain 80, Australia 50, New Zealand 50, United States 130, Canada 95; in 1970, Great Britain 85, Australia 50, New Zealand 45, United States 130, Canada 90; in 1980, Great Britain 90, Australia 70, New Zealand 50, United States 140, Canada 95.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The chart shows the number of people in prison in five countries between 1930 and 1980.
Overall, the United States always had the highest number of prisoners, while Great Britain had the lowest during most of the period. The other countries had medium numbers with some changes.
In 1930, the US had about 100 thousand prisoners, which was much more than in the other countries. This number went down in 1940 but then went up again, reaching about 140 thousand in 1980. Great Britain started with around 30 thousand and stayed the lowest, even though it slowly increased.
Canada and New Zealand showed ups and downs between 60 and 90 thousand. Australia also increased a little and reached around 80 thousand in 1980.
In conclusion, the US was always the leader, Great Britain had the smallest figures, and the other three countries were in the middle.
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