Get tough control policies in the United States are often portrayed as the reflection of the public\u27s will: Americans are punitive -and want offenders locked up. Research from the past decade both reinforces and challenges this assessment. The public clearly accepts, if not prefers, a range of punitive policies (e.g., capital punishment, three-strikes-and-you\u27re-out laws, imprisonment). But support for get-tough policies is mushy. Thus citizens may be willing to substitute a sentence of life imprisonment without parole for the death penalty. Especially when nonviolent offenders are involved, there is substantial support for intermediate sanctions and for restorative justice. Despite three decades of criticism, rehabilitation-partic...
grantor: University of TorontoOver the past 25 years public opinion polls in Canada, the U...
A politically popular trend in the U.S., which has garnered a groundswell of public support, has bee...
In recent decades prison policy has a reoriented towards measures which try to rehabilitate, rather ...
Get tough control policies in the United States are often portrayed as the reflection of the public...
Get tough control policies in the United States are often portrayed as the reflection of the public...
For three decades, American correctional policy has focused on getting tough with offenders, and r...
For three decades, American correctional policy has focused on getting tough with offenders, and r...
PERSONS arguing for and against changing legal codes and the penal system often refer to the state o...
Mass Incarceration: Punitive Laws that Challenge Equal Rights and Opportunities for all explores Ame...
Previous research has shown that the public endorses rehabilitation as a core goal of corrections. O...
Previous research has shown that the public endorses rehabilitation as a core goal of corrections. O...
Analyzes how American juvenile justice system policy has become increasingly punitive over the last ...
The U.S. is famous for being the country with the highest incarceration rate in the world – but what...
This is the first book to address the question of what role public opinion should play in the way cr...
grantor: University of TorontoOver the past 25 years public opinion polls in Canada, the U...
grantor: University of TorontoOver the past 25 years public opinion polls in Canada, the U...
A politically popular trend in the U.S., which has garnered a groundswell of public support, has bee...
In recent decades prison policy has a reoriented towards measures which try to rehabilitate, rather ...
Get tough control policies in the United States are often portrayed as the reflection of the public...
Get tough control policies in the United States are often portrayed as the reflection of the public...
For three decades, American correctional policy has focused on getting tough with offenders, and r...
For three decades, American correctional policy has focused on getting tough with offenders, and r...
PERSONS arguing for and against changing legal codes and the penal system often refer to the state o...
Mass Incarceration: Punitive Laws that Challenge Equal Rights and Opportunities for all explores Ame...
Previous research has shown that the public endorses rehabilitation as a core goal of corrections. O...
Previous research has shown that the public endorses rehabilitation as a core goal of corrections. O...
Analyzes how American juvenile justice system policy has become increasingly punitive over the last ...
The U.S. is famous for being the country with the highest incarceration rate in the world – but what...
This is the first book to address the question of what role public opinion should play in the way cr...
grantor: University of TorontoOver the past 25 years public opinion polls in Canada, the U...
grantor: University of TorontoOver the past 25 years public opinion polls in Canada, the U...
A politically popular trend in the U.S., which has garnered a groundswell of public support, has bee...
In recent decades prison policy has a reoriented towards measures which try to rehabilitate, rather ...