In Enforcing Freedom: Drug Courts, Therapeutic Communities and the Intimacies of the State, Kerwin Kaye challenges the notion that drug courts are the more effective and humane judicial option to mass incarceration, showing how they uphold a structure of ‘stratified penalisation’ that is significantly intensifying the impact of the ‘war on drugs’ on the racialised poor. Capturing the stark realities of the US criminal justice system, Kaye’s years of research have paid off in this profound, nuanced and pioneering book, writes Alessandro Ford
Three ex-Confederate officers were tried for war crimes in the aftermath of the American Civil War. ...
Joelle Grogan (Middlesex University) explains the law and governance put in place by the UK governme...
This chapter in the edited collection 'Tricky Design: The Ethics of Things', explores the growing us...
In Enforcing Freedom: Drug Courts, Therapeutic Communities and the Intimacies of the State, Kerwin K...
During 2020, residents of the West Nile sub-region of North West Uganda resisted government-imposed ...
Sometimes secrecy in law is required to protect vulnerable witnesses or suppress sensitive evidence....
For complex anthropological, social, professional and legal reasons, many Western countries spend ap...
peer-reviewedThe mental healthcare of prisoners is seen as a public health challenge internationally...
Allowing prisoners to access college-level education reduces the risk of reoffending and can save st...
This article reports on the analysis of an online forum on the UK’s National Health Service website ...
Researching the failures and successes of the criminal justice system leads to numbers, not lives. W...
Despite the massive state interventions into financial markets following the crash of 2007, the acad...
This paper examines the use of Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) and methodologies such as PDSAs,...
Incentives have been proposed to NHS hospitals to encourage the collection of ‘quality’ umbilical UC...
The Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill includes major proposals on crime and justice in Engla...
Three ex-Confederate officers were tried for war crimes in the aftermath of the American Civil War. ...
Joelle Grogan (Middlesex University) explains the law and governance put in place by the UK governme...
This chapter in the edited collection 'Tricky Design: The Ethics of Things', explores the growing us...
In Enforcing Freedom: Drug Courts, Therapeutic Communities and the Intimacies of the State, Kerwin K...
During 2020, residents of the West Nile sub-region of North West Uganda resisted government-imposed ...
Sometimes secrecy in law is required to protect vulnerable witnesses or suppress sensitive evidence....
For complex anthropological, social, professional and legal reasons, many Western countries spend ap...
peer-reviewedThe mental healthcare of prisoners is seen as a public health challenge internationally...
Allowing prisoners to access college-level education reduces the risk of reoffending and can save st...
This article reports on the analysis of an online forum on the UK’s National Health Service website ...
Researching the failures and successes of the criminal justice system leads to numbers, not lives. W...
Despite the massive state interventions into financial markets following the crash of 2007, the acad...
This paper examines the use of Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) and methodologies such as PDSAs,...
Incentives have been proposed to NHS hospitals to encourage the collection of ‘quality’ umbilical UC...
The Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill includes major proposals on crime and justice in Engla...
Three ex-Confederate officers were tried for war crimes in the aftermath of the American Civil War. ...
Joelle Grogan (Middlesex University) explains the law and governance put in place by the UK governme...
This chapter in the edited collection 'Tricky Design: The Ethics of Things', explores the growing us...