Incapacitation of offenders has been an influential goal of criminal justice policy during the era of mass incarceration. The Supreme Court’s Eighth Amendment Jurisprudence has accepted incapacitation alone as a justifying purpose for recidivist sentencing enhancements. Yet recent Eighth Amendment decisions have required that severe sentences of incarceration be justified by reference to all purposes of punishment cumulatively, and have tested claims of incapacitative benefits against empirical evidence. This Article critiques penal incapacitation as both theoretically and empirically flawed. Incapacitation theory underestimates situational factors contributing to crime, over-attributes dangerousness to individuals, and fails to account for...
We jail too many people and it costs too much. Incarceration is not only expensive, it also is prone...
How should the criminal law account for defendants’ incapacities? It’s often claimed that some incap...
It is inevitable and regrettable that inmates continue to commit crimes while serving their sentence...
Incapacitation of offenders has been an influential goal of criminal justice policy during the era o...
This paper focuses on imprisonment, as it is the most severe, iconic and resource-intensive form of...
Among the manifold goals of penal confinement, incapacitation aims to impose a period of “time out” ...
Courts and commentators give scant attention to the incapacitation rationale for capital punishment,...
Economic models of crime have focused primarily on the goal of deterrence; the goal of incapacitatio...
England and Wales, like many comparable jurisdictions, has relied increasingly upon measures designe...
A lively debate began in the late 1970\u27s on the topic of criminal sentencing. A major attack was ...
Two decades of criminal-justice reform in the United States have achieved only a modest reduction in...
Abstract This essay provides an economist’s perspective on criminological research into incapacitati...
The United States is in the midst of an incarceration crisis. Over-incarceration is depleting state ...
A new criminal law has emerged in the last quarter century. The dominant goal of the new criminal la...
Economic analyses of criminal law are frequently and heavily criticized for being unable to explain ...
We jail too many people and it costs too much. Incarceration is not only expensive, it also is prone...
How should the criminal law account for defendants’ incapacities? It’s often claimed that some incap...
It is inevitable and regrettable that inmates continue to commit crimes while serving their sentence...
Incapacitation of offenders has been an influential goal of criminal justice policy during the era o...
This paper focuses on imprisonment, as it is the most severe, iconic and resource-intensive form of...
Among the manifold goals of penal confinement, incapacitation aims to impose a period of “time out” ...
Courts and commentators give scant attention to the incapacitation rationale for capital punishment,...
Economic models of crime have focused primarily on the goal of deterrence; the goal of incapacitatio...
England and Wales, like many comparable jurisdictions, has relied increasingly upon measures designe...
A lively debate began in the late 1970\u27s on the topic of criminal sentencing. A major attack was ...
Two decades of criminal-justice reform in the United States have achieved only a modest reduction in...
Abstract This essay provides an economist’s perspective on criminological research into incapacitati...
The United States is in the midst of an incarceration crisis. Over-incarceration is depleting state ...
A new criminal law has emerged in the last quarter century. The dominant goal of the new criminal la...
Economic analyses of criminal law are frequently and heavily criticized for being unable to explain ...
We jail too many people and it costs too much. Incarceration is not only expensive, it also is prone...
How should the criminal law account for defendants’ incapacities? It’s often claimed that some incap...
It is inevitable and regrettable that inmates continue to commit crimes while serving their sentence...