As the academy\u27s focus has turned to sentencing in the wake of Blakely v. Washington and United States v. Booker, most commentators have continued their benign neglect of actual sentencing practices as they occur in state courts, not to mention whether and how such policies are effective in achieving the goals of criminal justice.This note examines trends in state sentencing policies and prison populations from the perspective of a would-be state reformer hoping to decrease her state\u27s prison budget. Economic pressures, efficiency arguments, and social justice claims have combined to cause some states to desire lower prison populations, but few empirical studies exist of how states actually go about reducing their prison costs.This no...
As the movement to reduce the outsized scale of U.S. incarceration rates gains momentum, there has b...
Summarizes key developments in state criminal justice policy in the areas of sentencing, drug policy...
The Columbia Law Review\u27s Symposium on sentencing, which took place less than two weeks after the...
As the academy\u27s focus has turned to sentencing in the wake of Blakely v. Washington and United S...
As the academy\u27s focus has turned to sentencing in the wake of Blakely v. Washington and United S...
States often follow trends when enacting sentencing policy. After a trend of get tough on crime pol...
This Note addresses the significant problem that is the United States’ criminal justice system as a ...
As the movement to reduce the outsized scale of U.S. incarceration rates gains momentum, there has b...
"Changing Direction? State Sentencing Reforms 2004-2006" finds that at least 22 states have enacted ...
State prison systems, particularly in the Southern US, have been overpopulated for decades with unli...
As the movement to reduce the outsized scale of US incarceration rates gains momentum, there has bee...
Approximately ten years ago, a conservative-led movement to engage in various forms of correctional ...
As the movement to reduce the outsized scale of U.S. incarceration rates gains momentum, there has b...
As the movement to reduce the outsized scale of U.S. incarceration rates gains momentum, there has b...
Objective: Sentencing guidelines, statutory presumptive sentencing, determinate sentencing, truth in...
As the movement to reduce the outsized scale of U.S. incarceration rates gains momentum, there has b...
Summarizes key developments in state criminal justice policy in the areas of sentencing, drug policy...
The Columbia Law Review\u27s Symposium on sentencing, which took place less than two weeks after the...
As the academy\u27s focus has turned to sentencing in the wake of Blakely v. Washington and United S...
As the academy\u27s focus has turned to sentencing in the wake of Blakely v. Washington and United S...
States often follow trends when enacting sentencing policy. After a trend of get tough on crime pol...
This Note addresses the significant problem that is the United States’ criminal justice system as a ...
As the movement to reduce the outsized scale of U.S. incarceration rates gains momentum, there has b...
"Changing Direction? State Sentencing Reforms 2004-2006" finds that at least 22 states have enacted ...
State prison systems, particularly in the Southern US, have been overpopulated for decades with unli...
As the movement to reduce the outsized scale of US incarceration rates gains momentum, there has bee...
Approximately ten years ago, a conservative-led movement to engage in various forms of correctional ...
As the movement to reduce the outsized scale of U.S. incarceration rates gains momentum, there has b...
As the movement to reduce the outsized scale of U.S. incarceration rates gains momentum, there has b...
Objective: Sentencing guidelines, statutory presumptive sentencing, determinate sentencing, truth in...
As the movement to reduce the outsized scale of U.S. incarceration rates gains momentum, there has b...
Summarizes key developments in state criminal justice policy in the areas of sentencing, drug policy...
The Columbia Law Review\u27s Symposium on sentencing, which took place less than two weeks after the...